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Prompt engineering with a large language model to assist providers in responding to patient inquiries: a real-time implementation in the electronic health record.
JAMIA Open 2024 October
BACKGROUND: Large language models (LLMs) can assist providers in drafting responses to patient inquiries. We examined a prompt engineering strategy to draft responses for providers in the electronic health record. The aim was to evaluate the change in usability after prompt engineering.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: A pre-post study over 8 months was conducted across 27 providers. The primary outcome was the provider use of LLM-generated messages from Generative Pre-Trained Transformer 4 (GPT-4) in a mixed-effects model, and the secondary outcome was provider sentiment analysis.
RESULTS: Of the 7605 messages generated, 17.5% ( n = 1327) were used. There was a reduction in negative sentiment with an odds ratio of 0.43 (95% CI, 0.36-0.52), but message use decreased ( P < .01). The addition of nurses after the study period led to an increase in message use to 35.8% ( P < .01).
DISCUSSION: The improvement in sentiment with prompt engineering suggests better content quality, but the initial decrease in usage highlights the need for integration with human factors design.
CONCLUSION: Future studies should explore strategies for optimizing the integration of LLMs into the provider workflow to maximize both usability and effectiveness.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: A pre-post study over 8 months was conducted across 27 providers. The primary outcome was the provider use of LLM-generated messages from Generative Pre-Trained Transformer 4 (GPT-4) in a mixed-effects model, and the secondary outcome was provider sentiment analysis.
RESULTS: Of the 7605 messages generated, 17.5% ( n = 1327) were used. There was a reduction in negative sentiment with an odds ratio of 0.43 (95% CI, 0.36-0.52), but message use decreased ( P < .01). The addition of nurses after the study period led to an increase in message use to 35.8% ( P < .01).
DISCUSSION: The improvement in sentiment with prompt engineering suggests better content quality, but the initial decrease in usage highlights the need for integration with human factors design.
CONCLUSION: Future studies should explore strategies for optimizing the integration of LLMs into the provider workflow to maximize both usability and effectiveness.
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