Designing audit and feedback dashboards for dentists to monitor their opioid prescribing

Int J Med Inform. 2023 Aug:176:105092. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2023.105092. Epub 2023 May 22.

Abstract

Background and objective: Prescription drug abuse is a major factor leading to drug overdose deaths in the US and dentists are one of the leading prescribers of opioid pain medication. Knowing that Audit & Feedback (A&F) dashboards are an effective tool and are used as quality improvement interventions, we aimed to develop such dashboards personalized for dental providers which could allow them to monitor their own opioid prescribing performance.

Methods: In this paper we report on the process for designing the A&F dashboards for dentists which were developed by using an iterative human-centered design process. The results obtained from each iteration were used to enrich the information needs analyses, provide function testing, and guide the design decisions of the next iteration.

Results: Engaging dentists in the development and refinement of the dashboards while using the think-aloud protocol for user-testing, provided rapid feedback and identified areas that were confusing and needed either a redesign or additional explanatory content. The final version of dashboards consisted of displaying necessary information through easy to interpret visualizations and interactive features. These included providing access to current national and organizational prescribing guidelines, displaying changes in individual prescribing behavior over time, comparing individual prescribing rate to peer group rate and target rate, displaying procedure specific prescribing, integrating patient reported post-operative dental pain experience and providing navigation and interpretation tips for users. The dashboards were easy to learn and understand for the dentists and were deemed as worth using often in dental practice.

Conclusion: Our research was able to demonstrate the creation of useful and usable A&F dashboards using data from electronic dental records and patient surveys, for dentists to effectively monitor their opioid prescribing behavior. Efficacy of the dashboards will be tested in future work.

Keywords: Analgesics; Dental informatics; Evidence-based dentistry; Opioid; Patient reported outcome measures; Quality improvement; User-centered design.

MeSH terms

  • Analgesics, Opioid* / therapeutic use
  • Dentists
  • Feedback
  • Humans
  • Pain
  • Practice Patterns, Physicians'*

Substances

  • Analgesics, Opioid