| Literature DB >> 26286139 |
Dawn M Klein1, Gemmae M Fix, Timothy P Hogan, Steven R Simon, Kim M Nazi, Carolyn L Turvey.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Information sharing between providers is critical for care coordination, especially in health systems such as the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), where many patients also receive care from other health care organizations. Patients can facilitate this sharing by using the Blue Button, an online tool that promotes patients' ability to view, print, and download their health records.Entities:
Keywords: care coordination; consumer health information technology; eHealth; health care providers; health record, personal; information sharing; meaningful use; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26286139 PMCID: PMC4736289 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.4595
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Patient characteristics (N=34).
| Sample characteristics | Participants | |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 61.6 (10.2) | |
| Gender (male), n (%) | 33 (97) | |
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| High school or some technical/college | 20 (58) |
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| College graduate or more | 14 (42) |
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| <$25,000 | 7 (21) |
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| $25,000-$50,000 | 13 (39) |
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| >$50,000 | 13 (39) |
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| ≤1 year | 13 (38) |
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| 2-3 years | 15 (44) |
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| ≥4 years | 6 (18) |
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| Less than once a month | 11 (32) |
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| About once a month | 16 (47) |
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| About once a week or more | 7 (21) |
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| Very comfortable | 13 (38) |
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| Somewhat comfortable | 12 (35) |
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| Neither comfortable/uncomfortable | 5 (15) |
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| Somewhat or very uncomfortable | 4 (12) |
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| Excellent or very good | 13(38) |
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| Good | 10 (29) |
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| Fair or poor | 11 (32) |
Summary of themes by patient responses with illustrative quotes.
| Theme | Patient quote | |
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| Found on their own exploring My Health | “...looking at My Health |
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| Mixed responses to the ease of use | “It’s easy to use and it’s self-explanatory.” |
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| “Frustrating.” |
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| “It’s complicated.” |
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| Can be too long in length | “What I don’t like is how much paper it takes up.” |
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| Sharing information between providers relies on the patient | “...it’s up to me to move the information back and forth.” |
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| Online access is easy and saves time | “It’s easier than the phone and it’s a timesaver as well.” |
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| “It’s better than me sending a release to [VA administrative office] and having them mail me...I could just go online [to get results] instead of having to wait for this giant document to come.” |
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| Engaged in their own health care | “...the first time I used it I was really happy because I was participating in my health care. I mean you can actually see real time what’s going on...which is really good. So it makes you part of the process.” |
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| Value in sharing information for time and money | “Saves a stick in the arm... saves them...the money and the time and effort...your lab results are just as good from 2 months ago, as they were from today to 3 weeks away.” |
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| Selective in what information is shared | “Typically just print the labs...here’s the copy of my VA lab work...” |
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| Mixed response for preference to print or electronically share and preference based on what they perceive may be better for their provider | “I would prefer...[to] make the PDF from the Blue Button and then put it on my... iPad ...rather than printing off a bunch of paper.” |
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| “Just bring in a copy...it’s faster.” |
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| “For [provider] I’d prefer to give her the paper copy because of her time...that way she can look it over when she’s ready.” |
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| Value sharing self-reported information | “...with the over-the-counter medication and stuff like that they need to be aware of what was going on...the better treatment that I can get out of my provider is based on the more knowledge that they have, not out of an educated guess...” |
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| Supportive of delegate access to VA providers; mixed support for delegate access to non-VA providers | “I’m confident in my providers and know they would maintain proper amount of security and are very ethical health care providers.” |
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| “I don’t know how many...non-VA providers you want snoopin’ around in a VA record...I trust my doctor, but I don’t know, it’s a security type of thing with me.” |
Summary of themes by provider responses with illustrative quotes.
| Theme | Provider quote | |
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| All: limited knowledge of Blue Button | “I’ve not seen that...this is not what I get from a VA patient. What I get from him is akin to an office visit summary.” (non-VA) |
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| All: improve information display | “...it’s not that the information is not useful, it’s just that it’s displayed over too many pages.” (non-VA) |
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| Non-VA | “You’re not showing me the ‘patient visit’ here. The one thing that’s missing.” (non-VA) |
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| All | “I will print out stuff and give it to the patient, I say, ‘Here, go give this to your urologist, okay?.’...and sometimes ...we tell the patients, ‘You could have anything you want sent to whomever you want. Just go out to the business desk and those folks will take care of it.’” (VA) |
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| Non-VA: difficult to get information from VA and patients sharing this information can help bridge the gap | “With VA, we get nothing...[W]e need something we have to call the VA or have the patient acquire it...Nothing is ever sent automatically from VA...and most of the time I don’t even know that they see the VA...” (non-VA) |
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| “...we haven’t had real good luck getting information from VA, so I think this is...better, the Blue Button.” (non-VA) |
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| All: tool for patient education and value of self-report information | “Because people who are really reading or going through their records they are more involved in their health...they will learn more about their own health and their own medication.” (VA) |
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| “Having the self-report is important, because that allows you to figure out what you think is going on and what they think is going on is different. And bringing together different sources, like looking at their pill bottles...” (VA) |
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| Non-VA: improved efficacy | “...it would increase our accuracy and decrease our duplication of tests... it would make ...more economical sense for the patient insurance system as well.” (non-VA) |
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| Non-VA: abstract and incorporate relevant information in own electronic medical record | “It’s not just this sort of scanned PDF, but rather something that becomes useable and actionable.” (non-VA) |
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| All: mixed response to how it would impact workflow of clinical encounter, however information was valued | “It would help...I don’t think it would add a lot of time...to have the information is important.” (non-VA) |
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| “If they’re very knowledgeable and could tell me all this verbally, then it probably doesn’t necessarily save time...if this was a very long printout, it could take longer, but I don’t think that’s necessarily a bad thing. Because if you you’re getting a fuller picture...then I think that would be beneficial.” (VA) |
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| All: generally trust Blue Button report and self-entered information; however, may depend on the data reported and patient | “We ask patients to give us their history of what’s happened to them, and we trust that. There are times we have to go corroborate that, so I see no reason why I wouldn’t trust this any less than my encounter when I ask, ‘So what’s happened in the last year?’” (non-VA) |
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| “[the self-entered information] I get a little nervous...did they enter right? ...it’s a data quality issue.” (VA) |
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| All: prefer electronic receipt of data and easy sharing between systems | “What would be really ideal is if there were an interface between the community and the VA system where if a patient gets lab work done at the VA, or diagnostic studies done at the VA, or a colonoscopy done at the VA, right? Then, that stuff would come in and integrate with my system.” (non-VA) |
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| All: hard copy could be used for patient education | “I’d like them to bring it in their hand...We make notes on it, it goes back home with them. It’s incredibly valuable for them to have stuff in their hands.” (VA) |
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| All: receipt of information in advance of clinical encounter | “It’s always nice to have it ahead of the visit... then you can review it before the visit and highlight the important things that you want to address...” (non-VA) |
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| All: mixed support for delegate access to patient’s PHR | “In certain cases, I would...depends on the patient... and their problems.” (VA) |
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| “...it spills on the wrong side of patients embracing responsibility for their health record. And therefore, it probably spills on the wrong side of where the liability is...” (non-VA) |
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| All: open to patients logging in and sharing their personal health record data at a visit; however, possible work flow and technology barriers | “It’s going to take some time, but chronic illness management requires some time. You need to take time and talk to people about these things during visits, and I think this would be a way of making it more efficient, not less...it’s a tradeoff, you would save time by not doing it, but I think that not doing it is not a good option.” (VA) |
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| “Right now, they can’t log in to our computer, that would have to change...but, even so, I think that would sort of bog you down...in the office.” (non-VA) |