The study assessed the awareness, use, and perception of two clinical decision support (CDS) tools for sepsis—sepsis alert and sepsis advisor—among medical graduates at an academic hospital. The survey was sent to 673 residents and fellows in March 2022, 92 of them responded (response rate 13.7%). Among the 80 respondents who knew sepsis alert, only 11.3% used sepsis advisor. The main problems were alert fatigue (62.5%) and limited clinical utility (46.3%). Only 16.3% found both tools useful, while 52.5% found them not useful. Lack of information about advisor functions and alert suppression mechanisms limited their use. Respondents proposed a continuous asynchronous alert format, a "patient already treated" option, and redesigning the advisor into a workflow-aligned streaming tool.[1]