| Literature DB >> 26239859 |
Anuj K Dalal1, Patricia C Dykes2, Sarah Collins3, Lisa Soleymani Lehmann2, Kumiko Ohashi4, Ronen Rozenblum2, Diana Stade4, Kelly McNally4, Constance R C Morrison4, Sucheta Ravindran4, Eli Mlaver4, John Hanna4, Frank Chang5, Ravali Kandala5, George Getty5, David W Bates6.
Abstract
We implemented a web-based, patient-centered toolkit that engages patients/caregivers in the hospital plan of care by facilitating education and patient-provider communication. Of the 585 eligible patients approached on medical intensive care and oncology units, 239 were enrolled (119 patients, 120 caregivers). The most common reason for not approaching the patient was our inability to identify a health care proxy when a patient was incapacitated. Significantly more caregivers were enrolled in medical intensive care units compared with oncology units (75% vs 32%; P < .01). Of the 239 patient/caregivers, 158 (66%) and 97 (41%) inputted a daily and overall goal, respectively. Use of educational content was highest for medications and test results and infrequent for problems. The most common clinical theme identified in 291 messages sent by 158 patients/caregivers was health concerns, needs, preferences, or questions (19%, 55 of 291). The average system usability scores and satisfaction ratings of a sample of surveyed enrollees were favorable. From analysis of feedback, we identified barriers to adoption and outlined strategies to promote use.Entities:
Keywords: acute care patient portal; patient engagement technology; patient-centered care; patient-provider communication; patient/caregiver engagement
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26239859 PMCID: PMC7814931 DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Med Inform Assoc ISSN: 1067-5027 Impact factor: 4.497