| Literature DB >> 28676467 |
Cynthia J Sieck1, Jennifer L Hefner1, Jeanette Schnierle1, Hannah Florian1, Aradhna Agarwal1, Kristen Rundell1, Ann Scheck McAlearney1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient portals have shown promise in engaging individuals in self-management of chronic conditions by allowing patients to input and track health information and exchange secure electronic messages with their providers. Past studies have identified patient barriers to portal use including usability issues, low health literacy, and concerns about loss of personal contact as well as provider concerns such as increased time spent responding to messages. However, to date, studies of both patient and provider perspectives on portal use have focused on the pre-implementation or initial implementation phases and do not consider how these issues may change as patients and providers gain greater experience with portals.Entities:
Keywords: patient portals; patient-provider communication; qualitative study; secure messaging
Year: 2017 PMID: 28676467 PMCID: PMC5516097 DOI: 10.2196/medinform.7516
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Med Inform
Patient and provider concerns about secure messaging.
| Concerns | Representative verbatim comment | |
| Imposing on provider’s time | “Try to keep it to the important stuff and if I need to be seen, then make an appointment, at least that is what I am trying to do.” | |
| “I mean, I try to use...leave my physicians alone because, you know, I know that they have, you know, their number one priority is to take care of patients that are in the office.” | ||
| “I didn’t want to be a pain in the arse to all the doctors by, you know, trying to ask them so many questions.” | ||
| Uncompensated provider time | “And you know, sometimes I think, well I feel bad that I don’t go in and give him his due for his time. But you know, this only took a second or two.” | |
| “It was just that he would take the time to read it and respond without like coming in and paying for an appointment just increased my trust, I guess, that when a lot of things these days seem to be for the money, he had my well-being in mind.” | ||
| Uncertainty about when to use the portal | “Yeah and it’s like I say it's at his convenience for that. So he’s not rushed, and I’m not taking away from anything.” | |
| “Yeah, I don’t know if I should be using it for that purpose, I don’t know how much of his time I should take up.” | ||
| Unfocused and/or insufficient information | “I mean I have had people, I can think of one in particular. A guy sent in about a 4-paragraph message, detailing numerous complaints, I’m not sure what he expected, but my answer was like, ‘This is much too complicated, you have to come to the office.’” | |
| “So, to get valid information from patients, over the Internet probably requires a little bit more education than a lot of our patients have. Because if you can’t accurately describe symptoms, then you can’t accurately describe what you are doing, then it is going to be really hard to manage this appropriately. It is really hard to manage things appropriate regardless, but over MyChart, the degree of difficulty just increases.” | ||
| “Well that again, some of my people they’ll go on and on. I have another colleague whose patient will go on and on even more than mine. And when it gets to a point you probably need to have a conversation back and forth, you probably need a face to face conversation, I try to set up an appointment.” | ||
| Inappropriate topic | “Yeah one of the big pitfalls of MyChart messaging is the chest pain message. So, I have had people message, ‘I have been having left side chest pain radiating to my arm, I get short of breath, what should I do?’ So, these messages, we are not sitting by the computer waiting for the message to come in. I saw her message 4 hours later, I just happened to be going on, because I was on-call on a Saturday. And then I had to call first thing, didn’t answer, so it created a big crisis really. But it ended up that she was okay. And I had to get her son to go to her house, and he ended up taking her to the ER, and everything turned out fine. But at the time we didn’t know.” | |
| “They want to give you this litany follow up, of what has been happening at home, you know, like you are email buddies. I don’t like being any patient’s email buddy.” | ||
| Incorrect use of message feature | “I guess I don’t like when it is used incorrectly, emergencies, for clerical issues, things that should be handled by another staff member that doesn’t need to go directly to me. More and more the message comes to me and no one deals with it or answers the question. The patient just feels empowered to say, ‘Hey I need to schedule an appointment,’ It took me like two minutes to open it up figure it out and send a message, close it give it to someone else.” | |
| “‘Can you check on my prescription for something,’ and normally a nurse would be able to do that without me even knowing about it or getting involved. But now I have to get involved. I have to do it all.” | ||
| “The patients can make appointments but, they often don’t click on the right button so those come to us.” | ||
Opportunities to clarify “rules of engagement” and improve patient-portal use.
| Providers’ suggestions | Representative verbatim comment |
| Offer patient training on appropriate patient-portal use | “One thing that I think might be helpful is to have like almost guidelines for the patient, of what kinds of things are appropriate for MyChart and what kind of things aren’t. So, you know, this is not to discuss new problems or symptoms you are having. That needs to be an office visit. It is to follow up, for quick questions. That kind of thing.” |
| “...with training patients and probably providers to some extent too, on how to use it appropriately and transmit the appropriate information.” | |
| Make patients accountable for learning how to use the patient portal | “When they sign up, if we have it written on paper or something like that, that we can hand them and say, ‘Please review these guidelines.’ Maybe have them initial off that they have read them.” |
| “Electronically, like have a course. They can take a course, like very brief course. And sign an agreement. And after they sign the agreement, and they understand the application of MyChart, then they would be allowed to sign in for MyChart.” | |
| Enhance secure messaging feature to reinforce “rules” | “I think that when people send refills on MyChart, and I don’t mean the refill mechanism, but they message me with a refill. So it might be good if there was a pop up saying, ‘There is another way to do refills,’ ‘There is another way for emergencies, which is to call on-call,’ ‘There is another way to if it is not about you go to that person’s MyChart.’ So it might be good to have some kind of pop-up, just so they stop and read. It could probably save a lot of nonsense messages.” |
| “I think it would be great if it could be filtered, through some system or people. Or some messages need to go to the desk, scheduling person, somewhere. It should go directly to them rather than coming to me and I have to answer and route it to them.” |