Treatment decisions for patients receiving invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) are complex and depend simultaneously on the current ventilator settings, the function of multiple interrelated organ systems, and other treatments. An artificial intelligence (AI)-based clinical decision support system (CDSS) offers a promising approach to alleviate uncertainty in this complex management and provide personalized treatment recommendations. However, little is known about clinician preferences for which treatment decisions clinicians think would most benefit from a CDSS. Therefore, we conducted a cross-sectional electronic survey of practicing physicians, nurses, advanced practice providers, and respiratory therapists to identify key treatment decisions in IMV care. We sent the survey instrument to 132 clinicians across six geographically diverse health systems. Among 51 respondents (39% response rate), there were 24 (47%) physicians, 7 (14%) registered nurses, 8 (16%) advanced practice providers, and 12 (24%) respiratory therapists. Participants were from five US states including Pennsylvania, California, Michigan, Minnesota, and Nebraska. At least 50% of participants identified 18 distinct treatment decisions for IMV care as very important or absolutely essential, including many that were outside of the ventilator settings themselves. The highest agreement about importance was for the decision to extubate (N=51, 100%), and the decisions to conduct a spontaneous awakening trial (N=48, 94%) and spontaneous breathing trial (N=48, 94%). The highest agreement about a decision being not important or only slightly important was for the shape of the inspiratory flow pattern (N=15, 29%). These findings underscore the scope and complexity of clinical decision making across multidisciplinary teams in caring for people receiving IMV. Furthermore, they underscore the gap between important clinician-identified decisions and existing IMV CDSSs that provide suggestions for at most 5 ventilator settings without support for other related decisions. Future work is needed to identify which of these decisions might be most appropriate for inclusion in a CDSS to support IMV management.
Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.
Funding StatementThis study did not receive any funding.
Author DeclarationsI confirm all relevant ethical guidelines have been followed, and any necessary IRB and/or ethics committee approvals have been obtained.
Yes
The details of the IRB/oversight body that provided approval or exemption for the research described are given below:
The Institutional Review Board of the University of Pennsylvania gave ethical approval for this work under protocol number 852813.
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Footnotesgary.weissmanpennmedicine.upenn.edu
Nicholas.BishopPennmedicine.upenn.edu
Benjamin.SchmidPennmedicine.upenn.edu
vmaddenupenn.edu
Romain.Pirracchioucsf.edu
Jentzer.Jacobmayo.edu
kathrynrimanpitt.edu
dustin.krutsingerunmc.edu
Bruno_DiGiovineihacares.com
ungarcis.upenn.edu
shalpernupenn.edu
catherine.auriemmapennmedicine.upenn.edu
valleytmed.umich.edu
MKerlinpennmedicine.upenn.edu
Data AvailabilityAll data produced in the present study are available upon reasonable request to the authors.
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