Medical College of Wisconsin
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Evaluation of physician decision making with the use of prior probabilities and a decision-analysis model. Arch Fam Med 1993 May;2(5):529-34

Date

05/01/1993

Pubmed ID

8118569

DOI

10.1001/archfami.2.5.529

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85047689656 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   4 Citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether treatment decisions could be influenced by supplying probabilities and whether these decisions would be consistent with a decision-analysis model.

DESIGN: Survey with case scenarios and a computerized decision-analysis model.

SETTING: Family practice residency program.

PARTICIPANTS: Forty family practice residents and faculty in the experimental group and six controls.

INTERVENTIONS: Twelve cases scenarios of patients with hypertension and coexisting diseases were developed. Family practice physicians were asked to rank their drugs of choice for each case. In the second phase, six case scenarios included probabilities for efficacy and adverse reactions of step 1 antihypertensives. These drug selections were compared with a computerized decision-analysis model.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Frequencies of matches between the drug selections of physicians and the computer model.

RESULTS: The frequency of matches before probabilities were provided to physicians was low (45.6%) and there was a significant increase when probabilities were supplied (71.3%). Regardless of experience level, physicians increased their consistency with the computer model after probabilities were supplied.

CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated that physician decision making for antihypertensive therapy can be influenced by patient-specific probability estimates. Probability data can help less experienced residents make decisions that are comparable to those of attending physicians. This study was conducted in one residency program and the generalizability to the practicing physician is unknown. These findings would suggest that educational efforts in residency programs, health maintenance organizations, or group practices may benefit from patient-specific probabilities that assist with decisions for drug therapy interventions.

Author List

Carter BL, Butler CD, Rogers JC, Holloway RL



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Adult
Aged
Decision Making
Decision Support Techniques
Drug Utilization
Faculty, Medical
Female
Humans
Hypertension
Internship and Residency
Male
Middle Aged
Physicians, Family
Practice Patterns, Physicians'
Probability
Texas