| Literature DB >> 28633483 |
Sarah Collins1,2,3, Patricia Dykes1,2, David W Bates1,2,3,4, Brittany Couture1, Ronen Rozenblum1,2, Jennifer Prey5, Kristin O'Reilly6, Patricia Q Bourie6, Cindy Dwyer7, S Ryan Greysen8, Jeffery Smith9, Michael Gropper10, Anuj K Dalal1,2.
Abstract
As part of an interdisciplinary acute care patient portal task force with members from 10 academic medical centers and professional organizations, we held a national workshop with 71 attendees representing over 30 health systems, professional organizations, and technology companies. Our consensus approach identified 7 key sociotechnical and evaluation research focus areas related to the consumption and capture of information from patients, care partners (eg, family, friends), and clinicians through portals in the acute and post-acute care settings. The 7 research areas were: (1) standards, (2) privacy and security, (3) user-centered design, (4) implementation, (5) data and content, (6) clinical decision support, and (7) measurement. Patient portals are not yet in routine use in the acute and post-acute setting, and research focused on the identified domains should increase the likelihood that they will deliver benefit, especially as there are differences between needs in acute and post-acute care compared to the ambulatory setting.Entities:
Keywords: patient engagement; patient experience; patient portals; quality of care
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 28633483 DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocx054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Med Inform Assoc ISSN: 1067-5027 Impact factor: 4.497