Multilayered and digitally structured presentation formats of trustworthy recommendations: A combined survey and randomised trial

Abstract

Objectives: To investigate practicing physicians' preferences, perceived usefulness and understanding of a new multilayered guideline presentation format - compared to a standard format - as well as conceptual understanding of trustworthy guideline concepts. Design: Participants attended a standardised lecture in which they were presented with a clinical scenario and randomised to view a guideline recommendation in a multilayered format or standard format after which they answered multiple-choice questions using clickers. Both groups were also presented and asked about guideline concepts. Setting: Mandatory educational lectures in 7 non-academic and academic hospitals, and 2 settings involving primary care in Lebanon, Norway, Spain and the UK. Participants: 181 practicing physicians in internal medicine (156) and general practice (25). Interventions: A new digitally structured, multilayered guideline presentation format and a standard narrative presentation format currently in widespread use. Primary and secondary outcome measures: Our primary outcome was preference for presentation format. Understanding, perceived usefulness and perception of absolute effects were secondary outcomes. Results: 72% (95% CI 65 to 79) of participants preferred the multilayered format and 16% (95% CI 10 to 22) preferred the standard format. A majority agreed that recommendations (multilayered 86% vs standard 91%, p value=0.31) and evidence summaries (79% vs 77%, p value=0.76) were useful in the context of the clinical scenario. 72% of participants randomised to the multilayered format vs 58% for standard formats reported correct understanding of the recommendations (p value=0.06). Most participants elected an appropriate clinical action after viewing the recommendations (98% vs 92%, p value=0.10). 82% of the participants considered absolute effect estimates in evidence summaries helpful or crucial. Conclusions: Clinicians clearly preferred a novel multilayered presentation format to the standard format. Whether the preferred format improves decision-making and has an impact on patient important outcomes merits further investigation. © 2017 Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited.

Description

Keywords

Epidemiology, Consumer behavior, Data display, General practitioners, Humans, Internal medicine, Lebanon, Norway, Physicians, primary care, Practice guidelines as topic, Spain, United kingdom, Consensus development, Controlled clinical trial, Controlled study, Decision making, General practice, Hospital, Human, Major clinical study, Multiple choice test, Narrative, Perception, Physician, Primary medical care, Randomized controlled trial, Statistical significance, Consumer attitude, General practitioner, Information processing, Practice guideline

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By