| Literature DB >> 26246964 |
D Keith McInnes1, Gemmae M Fix1, Jeffrey L Solomon2, Beth Ann Petrakis2, Leon Sawh3, David A Smelson4.
Abstract
Background. Homeless veterans have complex healthcare needs, but experience many barriers to treatment engagement. While information technologies (IT), especially mobile phones, are used to engage patients in care, little is known about homeless veterans' IT use. This study examines homeless veterans' access to and use of IT, attitudes toward health-related IT use, and barriers to IT in the context of homelessness. Methods. Qualitative interviews were conducted with 30 homeless veterans in different housing programs in Boston, MA, ranging from emergency shelters to supportive transitional housing that allow stays of up to 2 years. Interviews were conducted in person, audio recorded and then transcribed. Three researchers coded transcripts. Inductive thematic analysis was used. Results. Most participants (90%) had a mobile phone and were receptive to IT use for health-related communications. A common difficulty communicating with providers was the lack of a stable mailing address. Some participants were using mobile phones to stay in touch with providers. Participants felt mobile-phone calls or text messages could be used to remind patients of appointments, prescription refills, medication taking, and returning for laboratory results. Mobile phone text messaging was seen as convenient, and helped participants stay organized because necessary information was saved in text messages. Some reported concerns about the costs associated with mobile phone use (calls and texting), the potential to be annoyed by too many text messages, and not knowing how to use text messaging. Conclusion. Homeless veterans use IT and welcome its use for health-related purposes. Technology-assisted outreach among this population may lead to improved engagement in care.Entities:
Keywords: Access to care; Engagement in care; Health informatics; Health information technology; Homeless persons; Mobile phones; Outreach; Veterans; Vulnerable populations
Year: 2015 PMID: 26246964 PMCID: PMC4525686 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Characteristics of study participants.
| VA domiciliary ( | VA transitional housing ( | Emergency shelters ( | Grant per diem ( | Total ( | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | ( | % | ( | % | ( | % | ( | % | ( | |
|
| 78 | (7) | 83 | (5) | 100 | (9) | 83 | (5) | 87 | (26) |
|
| ||||||||||
| Hispanic | 0 | (0) | 0 | (0) | 11 | (1) | 17 | (1) | 0 | (0) |
| Native Am | 11 | (1) | 0 | (0) | 0 | (0) | 0 | (0) | 7 | (2) |
| Black | 0 | (0) | 50 | (3) | 11 | (1) | 17 | (1) | 17 | (5) |
| White | 89 | (9) | 50 | (3) | 78 | (7) | 67 | (4) | 77 | (23) |
|
| () | |||||||||
| Some HS | 0 | (0) | 17 | (1) | 0 | (0) | 0 | (0) | 3 | (1) |
| HS/GED | 22 | (2) | 50 | (3) | 33 | (3) | 50 | (3) | 37 | (11) |
| Some college | 78 | (7) | 33 | (2) | 67 | (6) | 50 | (3) | 60 | (18) |
|
| 78 | (7) | 100 | (6) | 89 | (8) | 100 | (6) | 90 | (27) |
|
| 78 | (7) | 67 | (4) | 56 | (5) | 83 | (5) | 70 | (21) |
|
| 67 | (6) | 67 | (4) | 56 | (5) | 100 | (6) | 70 | (21) |
| 50.7 | (10.16) | 54.8 | (5.12) | 58.0 | (4.64) | 50.0 | (10.49) | 53.6 | (8.34) | |
Notes.
Department of Veterans Affairs
standard deviation
high school
high school equivalency exam
Perceptions and uses of IT for health-related purposes, summary of findings.
| Topic | Perceptions and uses ( |
|---|---|
| Current health-related uses of technology | • Receive cell-phone reminder calls for appointments |
| • Use of mobile phone to stay in touch with health professionals | |
| • Some reported dislike for automated appointment reminder calls which can be confusing and use up valuable cell phone minutes. | |
|
| |
| Perceived benefits | • Convenience: information is retrievable, there is less need to write appointment information down, and the asynchronous communication is less intrusive. |
|
| |
| • Organization: reduces worry about losing slips of paper with appointment information, and forgetting to go to appointments | |
| Possible barriers | • Cost: calls and texts cost the recipient money if they do not have an unlimited mobile phone plan |
|
| |
| • Annoyance: too many text messages become annoying instead of helpful | |
| • Lack of skills: some participants lacked text messaging skills |
Attitudes toward specific health IT communication tools.
| Topic | Attitudes and perceptions ( |
|---|---|
| Appointment reminders | Many were supportive of text messages used for appointments |
| Medication-related reminders | Support for parsimonious use of medication related-reminders |
| Notifications related to laboratory work needed and results | Support for text message reminders to get laboratory tests done |
| “checking-in” type outreach | Proactive messages to patients not seen in clinic for a long time |