Designing multiple user perspectives and functionality for clinical decision support systems


Autoria(s): Buckingham, Christopher D.; Ahmed, Abu; Adams, Ann
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSSs) need to disseminate expertise in formats that suit different end users and with functionality tuned to the context of assessment. This paper reports research into a method for designing and implementing knowledge structures that facilitate the required flexibility. A psychological model of expertise is represented using a series of formally specified and linked XML trees that capture increasing elements of the model, starting with hierarchical structuring, incorporating reasoning with uncertainty, and ending with delivering the final CDSS. The method was applied to the Galatean Risk and Safety Tool, GRiST, which is a web-based clinical decision support system (www.egrist.org) for assessing mental-health risks. Results of its clinical implementation demonstrate that the method can produce a system that is able to deliver expertise targetted and formatted for specific patient groups, different clinical disciplines, and alternative assessment settings. The approach may be useful for developing other real-world systems using human expertise and is currently being applied to a logistics domain. © 2013 Polish Information Processing Society.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/21302/1/Designing_multiple_user_perspectives_and_functionality_for_clinical_decision_support_systems.pdf

Buckingham, Christopher D.; Ahmed, Abu and Adams, Ann (2013). Designing multiple user perspectives and functionality for clinical decision support systems. IN: 2013 Federated conference on Computer Science and Information Systems, FedCSIS 2013. IEEE.

Publicador

IEEE

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/21302/

Tipo

Book Section

NonPeerReviewed