How Do Spinal Surgeons Perceive The Impact of Factors Used in Post-Surgical Complication Risk Scores?

Enea Parimbelli, Wilk Szymon, Dympna O'Sullivan, Stephen Kingwell, Wojtek Michalowski, Martin Michalowski

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

When deciding about surgical treatment options, an important aspect of the decision-making process is the potential risk of complications. A risk assessment performed by a spinal surgeon is based on their knowledge of the best available evidence and on their own clinical experience. The objective of this work is to demonstrate the differences in the way spine surgeons perceive the importance of attributes used to calculate risk of post-operative and quantify the differences by building individual formal models of risk perceptions. We employ a preference-learning method - ROR-UTADIS - to build surgeon-specific additive value functions for risk of complications. Comparing these functions enables the identification and discussion of differences among personal perceptions of risk factors. Our results show there exist differences in surgeons' perceived factors including primary diagnosis, type of surgery, patient's age, body mass index, or presence of comorbidities.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)699-706
Number of pages8
JournalAMIA ... Annual Symposium proceedings / AMIA Symposium. AMIA Symposium
Volume2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019
EventAMIA Annual Symposium -
Duration: 1 Jan 2019 → …

Keywords

  • surgical treatment options
  • decision-making process
  • risk of complications
  • risk assessment
  • spinal surgeon
  • clinical experience
  • risk perceptions
  • preference-learning method
  • ROR-UTADIS
  • additive value functions
  • primary diagnosis
  • type of surgery
  • patient's age
  • body mass index
  • presence of comorbidities

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