PURPOSE
Pediatric primary care clinicians are often uncertain about patients' HIV infection risk and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) prescribing guidelines. This study was conducted to help identify ways to design and deliver useful electronic health record (EHR)-based alerts for PrEP to help mitigate this issue.
METHODS
Individual interviews and focus groups with pediatricians explored provider preferences for clinical decision support around PrEP in the EHR. Key themes were identified via the immersion-crystallization qualitative analytic technique.
RESULTS
Clinicians described ideal decision support tools as succinct, helpful in identifying patients at risk of acquiring HIV, providing automated follow-up, and linking to evidence-based prescribing guidelines. Concerns emerged about alert fatigue.
DISCUSSION
This study summarizes clinicians' preferences for EHR tool development to support PrEP provision among pediatricians with limited comfort and experience with prescribing PrEP. These findings can inform the development of PrEP decision support by implementing provider-centered feedback.