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      Designing Tailored Web-Based Instruction to Improve Practicing Physicians' Preventive Practices

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          Abstract

          Background

          The World Wide Web has led to the rapid growth of medical information and continuing medical educational offerings. Ease of access and availability at any time are advantages of the World Wide Web. Existing physician-education sites have often been designed and developed without systematic application of evidence and cognitive-educational theories; little rigorous evaluation has been conducted to determine which design factors are most effective in facilitating improvements in physician performance and patient-health outcomes that might occur as a result of physician participation in Web-based education. Theory and evidence-based Web design principles include the use of: needs assessment, multimodal strategies, interactivity, clinical cases, tailoring, credible evidence-based content, audit and feedback, and patient-education materials. Ease of use and design to support the lowest common technology denominator are also important.

          Objective

          Using these principles, design and develop a Web site including multimodal strategies for improving chlamydial-screening rates among primary care physicians.

          Methods

          We used office-practice data in needs assessment and as an audit/feedback tool. In the intervention introduced in 4 phases over 11 months, we provided a series of interactive, tailored, case vignettes with feedback on peer answers. We included a quality-improvement toolbox including clinical practice guidelines and printable patient education materials.

          Results

          In the formative evaluation of the first 2 chlamydia modules, data regarding the recruitment, enrollment, participation, and reminders have been examined. Preliminary evaluation data from a randomized, controlled trial has tested the effectiveness of this intervention in improving chlamydia screening rates with a significant increase in intervention physicians' chlamydia knowledge, attitude, and skills compared to those of a control group.

          Conclusions

          The application of theory in the development and evaluation of a Web-based continuing medical education intervention offers valuable insight into World Wide Web technology's influence on physician performance and the quality of medical care.

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          Most cited references54

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          Stages and processes of self-change of smoking: toward an integrative model of change.

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            Closing the gap between research and practice: an overview of systematic reviews of interventions to promote the implementation of research findings. The Cochrane Effective Practice and Organization of Care Review Group.

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              No magic bullets: a systematic review of 102 trials of interventions to improve professional practice.

              To determine the effectiveness of different types of interventions in improving health professional performance and health outcomes. MEDLINE, SCISEARCH, CINAHL and the Research and Development Resource Base in CME were searched for trials of educational interventions in the health care professions published between 1970 and 1993 inclusive. Studies were selected if they provided objective measurements of health professional performance or health outcomes and employed random or quasi-random allocation methods in their study designs to assign individual subjects or groups. Interventions included such activities as conferences, outreach visits, the use of local opinion leaders, audit and feedback, and reminder systems. Details extracted from the studies included the study design; the unit of allocation (e.g., patient, provider, practice, hospital); the characteristics of the targeted health care professionals, educational interventions and patients (when appropriate); and the main outcome measure. The inclusion criteria were met by 102 trials. Areas of behaviour change included general patient management, preventive services, prescribing practices, treatment of specific conditions such as hypertension or diabetes, and diagnostic service or hospital utilization. Dissemination-only strategies, such as conferences or the mailing of unsolicited materials, demonstrated little or no changes in health professional behaviour or health outcome when used alone. More complex interventions, such as the use of outreach visits or local opinion leaders, ranged from ineffective to highly effective but were most often moderately effective (resulting in reductions of 20% to 50% in the incidence of inappropriate performance). There are no "magic bullets" for improving the quality of health care, but there are a wide range of interventions available that, if used appropriately, could lead to important improvements in professional practice and patient outcomes.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Med Internet Res
                JMIR
                Journal of Medical Internet Research
                Gunther Eysenbach (Centre for Global eHealth Innovation, Toronto, Canada )
                1438-8871
                Jul-Sep 2003
                24 September 2003
                : 5
                : 3
                : e20
                Affiliations
                [1] 1simpleDivision of Continuing Medical Education simpleUniversity of Alabama School of Medicine Birmingham ALUSA
                [2] 2simpleAetna Integrated Informatics, Inc Hartford CTUSA
                [3] 3simpleUniversity of Alabama School of Medicine simpleDepartment of Pediatrics Birmingham ALUSA
                [4] 4simpleUniversity of Alabama at Birmingham simpleSchool of Health Related Professions Birmingham ALUSA
                [5] 5simpleUniversity of Alabama School of Medicine simpleDivision of General Internal Medicine Birmingham ALUSA
                Article
                v5i3e20 22879619
                10.2196/jmir.5.3.e20
                1550567
                14517111
                ecce366a-a181-448b-8ce7-47da72e34a83
                © Linda L Casebeer, Sheryl M Strasser, Claire M Spettell, Terry C Wall, Norman Weissman, Midge N Ray, Jeroan J Allison. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 24.9.2003. Except where otherwise noted, articles published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, including full bibliographic details and the URL (see "please cite as" above), and this statement is included.
                History
                : 19 May 2003
                : 24 June 2003
                : 17 July 2003
                : 1 August 2003
                Categories
                Original Paper

                Medicine
                internet,world wide web,online,continuing medical education,continuing health care education,education theory,cognitive theory,web site design,chlamydia screening

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