5 results on '"Audrey, Dupuis"'
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2. Development of a decision aid for cardiopulmonary resuscitation and invasive mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit employing user-centered design and a wiki platform for rapid prototyping
- Author
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Audrey Dupuis, Annie LeBlanc, Carole Anne Lavoie-Bérard, Daren K. Heyland, Diane Tapp, Holly O. Witteman, Ariane Plaisance, Carrie Anna McGinn, Patrick Archambault, Mark H. Ebell, Jennifer Kryworuchko, and Louisa Blair
- Subjects
Resuscitation ,Critical Care and Emergency Medicine ,020205 medical informatics ,Medical Doctors ,Computer science ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Health Care Providers ,Psychological intervention ,Nurses ,Social Sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,02 engineering and technology ,law.invention ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,law ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Decision aids ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Cardiac Arrest ,Psychology ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical Personnel ,lcsh:Science ,media_common ,Multidisciplinary ,Intensive care unit ,Hospitals ,Professions ,Intensive Care Units ,Engineering and Technology ,Medical emergency ,Research Article ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Decision Making ,education ,MEDLINE ,Cardiology ,Surgical and Invasive Medical Procedures ,Decision Support Techniques ,03 medical and health sciences ,Physicians ,medicine ,Prototypes ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,User-centered design ,Health professionals ,lcsh:R ,Cognitive Psychology ,Biology and Life Sciences ,medicine.disease ,Respiration, Artificial ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Health Care ,Technology Development ,Health Care Facilities ,People and Places ,Cognitive Science ,Population Groupings ,lcsh:Q ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Background Upon admission to an intensive care unit (ICU), all patients should discuss their goals of care and express their wishes concerning life-sustaining interventions (e.g., cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)). Without such discussions, interventions that prolong life at the cost of decreasing its quality may be used without appropriate guidance from patients. Objectives To adapt an existing decision aid about CPR to create a wiki-based decision aid individually adapted to each patient's risk factors; and to document the use of a wiki platform for this purpose. Methods We conducted three weeks of ethnographic observation in our ICU to observe intensivists and patients discussing goals of care and to identify their needs regarding decision making. We interviewed intensivists individually. Then we conducted three rounds of rapid prototyping involving 15 patients and 11 health professionals. We recorded and analyzed all discussions, interviews and comments, and collected sociodemographic data. Using a wiki, a website that allows multiple users to contribute or edit content, we adapted the decision aid accordingly and added the Good Outcome Following Attempted Resuscitation (GO-FAR) prediction rule calculator. Results We added discussion of invasive mechanical ventilation. The final decision aid comprises values clarification, risks and benefits of CPR and invasive mechanical ventilation, statistics about CPR, and a synthesis section. We added the GO-FAR prediction calculator as an online adjunct to the decision aid. Although three rounds of rapid prototyping simplified the information in the decision aid, 60% (n = 3/5) of the patients involved in the last cycle still did not understand its purpose. Conclusions Wikis and user-centered design can be used to adapt decision aids to users' needs and local contexts. Our wiki platform allows other centers to adapt our tools, reducing duplication and accelerating scale-up. Physicians need training in shared decision making skills about goals of care and in using the decision aid. A video version of the decision aid could clarify its purpose.
- Published
- 2018
3. Impact of Implementing a Wiki to Develop Structured Electronic Order Sets on Physicians' Intention to Use Wiki-Based Order Sets
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Patrick Michel Archambault, Pierre Beaupré, Laura Bégin, Audrey Dupuis, Mario Côté, and France Légaré
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knowledge translation ,020205 medical informatics ,decision support tools ,Best practice ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,02 engineering and technology ,collaborative writing applications ,Health informatics ,Likert scale ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Promotion (rank) ,Health Information Management ,Nursing ,emergency medicine ,Knowledge translation ,Theory of Planned Behavior ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,health informatics ,media_common ,Medical education ,Original Paper ,business.industry ,Theory of planned behavior ,Usability ,wiki ,Order (business) ,business ,computer physician order entry - Abstract
Background: Wikis have the potential to promote best practices in health systems by sharing order sets with a broad community of stakeholders. However, little is known about the impact of using a wiki on clinicians’ intention to use wiki-based order sets. Objective: The aims of this study were: (1) to describe the use of a wiki to create structured order sets for a single emergency department; (2) to evaluate whether the use of this wiki changed emergency physicians’ future intention to use wiki-based order sets; and (3) to understand the impact of using the wiki on the behavioral determinants for using wiki-based order sets. Methods: This was a pre/post-intervention mixed-methods study conducted in one hospital in Levis, Quebec. The intervention was comprised of receiving access to and being motivated by the department head to use a wiki for 6 months to create electronic order sets designed to be used in a computer physician order entry system. Before and after our intervention, we asked participants to complete a previously validated questionnaire based on the Theory of Planned Behavior. Our primary outcome was the intention to use wiki-based order sets in clinical practice. We also assessed participants’ attitude, perceived behavioral control, and subjective norm to use wiki-based order sets. Paired pre- and post-Likert scores were compared using Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. The post-questionnaire also included open-ended questions concerning participants’ comments about the wiki, which were then classified into themes using an existing taxonomy. Results: Twenty-eight emergency physicians were enrolled in the study (response rate: 100%). Physicians’ mean intention to use a wiki-based reminder was 5.42 (SD 1.04) before the intervention, and increased to 5.81 (SD 1.25) on a 7-point Likert scale (P=.03) after the intervention. Participants’ attitude towards using a wiki-based order set also increased from 5.07 (SD 0.90) to 5.57 (SD 0.88) (P=.003). Perceived behavioral control and subjective norm did not change. Easier information sharing was the most frequently positive impact raised. In order of frequency, the three most important facilitators reported were: ease of use, support from colleagues, and promotion by the departmental head. Although participants did not mention any perceived negative impacts, they raised the following barriers in order of frequency: poor organization of information, slow computers, and difficult wiki access. Conclusions: Emergency physicians’ intention and attitude to use wiki-based order sets increased after having access to and being motivated to use a wiki for 6 months. Future studies need to explore if this increased intention will translate into sustained actual use and improve patient care. Certain barriers need to be addressed before implementing a wiki for use on a larger scale. [JMIR Med Inform 2016;4(2):e18]
- Published
- 2016
4. Development of a Decision Aid for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Involving Intensive Care Unit Patients' and Health Professionals' Participation Using User-Centered Design and a Wiki Platform for Rapid Prototyping: A Research Protocol
- Author
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Ariane Plaisance, Holly O Witteman, Daren Keith Heyland, Mark H Ebell, Audrey Dupuis, Carole-Anne Lavoie-Bérard, France Légaré, and Patrick Michel Archambault
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020205 medical informatics ,education ,shared decision making ,Context (language use) ,02 engineering and technology ,intensive care medicine ,Health informatics ,cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Intensive care ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Decision aids ,Protocol ,Medicine ,medical informatics ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Adaptation (computer science) ,user-centered design ,User-centered design ,Communication design ,Protocol (science) ,Medical education ,business.industry ,end-of-life planning ,goals of care discussions ,General Medicine ,wikis ,business - Abstract
Background: Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is an intervention used in cases of cardiac arrest to revive patients whose heart has stopped. Because cardiac arrest can have potentially devastating outcomes such as severe neurological deficits even if CPR is performed, patients must be involved in determining in advance if they want CPR in the case of an unexpected arrest. Shared decision making (SDM) facilitates discussions about goals of care regarding CPR in intensive care units (ICUs). Patient decision aids (DAs) are proven to support the implementation of SDM. Many patient DAs about CPR exist, but they are not universally implemented in ICUs in part due to lack of context and cultural adaptation. Adaptation to local context is an important phase of implementing any type of knowledge tool such as patient DAs. User-centered design supported by a wiki platform to perform rapid prototyping has previously been successful in creating knowledge tools adapted to the needs of patients and health professionals (eg, asthma action plans). This project aims to explore how user-centered design and a wiki platform can support the adaptation of an existing DA for CPR to the local context. Objective: The primary objective is to use an existing DA about CPR to create a wiki-based DA that is adapted to the context of a single ICU and tailorable to individual patient’s risk factors while employing user-centered design. The secondary objective is to document the use of a wiki platform for the adaptation of patient DAs. Methods: This study will be conducted in a mixed surgical and medical ICU at Hotel-Dieu de Levis, Quebec, Canada. We plan to involve all 5 intensivists and recruit at least 20 alert and oriented patients admitted to the ICU and their family members if available. In the first phase of this study, we will observe 3 weeks of daily interactions between patients, families, intensivists, and other allied health professionals. We will specifically observe 5 dyads of attending intensivists and alert and oriented patients discussing goals of care concerning CPR to understand how a patient DA could support this decision. We will also conduct individual interviews with the 5 intensivists to identify their needs concerning the implementation of a DA. In the second phase of the study, we will build a first prototype based on the needs identified in Phase I. We will start by translating an existing DA entitled “Cardiopulmonary resuscitation: a decision aid for patients and their families.” We will then adapt this tool to the needs we identified in Phase I and archive this first prototype in a wiki. Building on the wiki’s programming architecture, we intend to integrate the Good Outcome Following Attempted Resuscitation risk calculator into our DA to determine personal risks and benefits of CPR for each patient. We will then present the first prototype to 5 new patient-intensivist dyads. Feedback about content and visual presentation will be collected from the intensivists through short interviews while longer interviews will be conducted with patients and their family members to inform the visual design and content of the next prototype. After each rapid prototyping cycle, 2 researchers will perform qualitative content analysis of data collected through interviews and direct observations. We will attempt to solve all content and visual design issues identified before moving to the next round of prototyping. In all, we will conduct 3 prototyping cycles with a total of 15 patient-intensivist dyads. Results: We expect to develop a multimedia wiki-based DA to support goals of care discussions about CPR adapted to the local needs of patients, their family members, and intensivists and tailorable to individual patient risk factors. The final version of the DA as well as the development process will be housed in an open-access wiki and free to be adapted and used in other contexts. Conclusions: This study will shed new light on the development of DAs adapted to local context and tailorable to individual patient risk factors employing user-centered design and a wiki to support rapid prototyping of content and visual design issues.
- Published
- 2016
5. L’évaluation de l’implantation et des retombées du service des aides à la vie étudiante en milieu universitaire
- Author
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Audrey Dupuis, Julie Lane, Amélie Soulard, Johanne Desrosiers, Pascale Morin, Emmanuelle Jasmin, Bruno Collard, and Jocelyne Faucher
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santé mentale ,étudiantes et étudiants universitaires ,service d’aide ,enseignement universitaire ,Education ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 - Abstract
The precarious mental health of university students is worrying and can have many consequences on their lives. Support services are offered by universities, but they generally are local initiatives that remain under evaluated. The Université de Sherbrooke has established a new service to support students on a personal, academic and professional level: the Aides à la vie étudiante (AVE) initiative. This article aims to assess the implementation process and the impact of the AVE initiative, according to Chens’ model (2015). A mixed methodology is used to do so. Semi-structured individual interviews were conducted with five university partners, four AVE and nine students. Questionnaires were also used and completed by 47 AVE and 70 students. An appointment-tracking tool completed by AVE was also used. The results show how the AVE initiative was implemented, the factors that favor or hinder its implementation and its impact and are then discussed and linked to other studies. The factors that facilitate or hinder the implementation identified can help determine the guidelines to be considered in the implementation of a support service for students in an university setting. Also, the predominantly positive impact of the initiative on the AVE, students and university supports the relevance of this type of support service.
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