| Literature DB >> 29898730 |
Fiona Fylan1,2, Lauren Caveney3, Alastair Cartwright4, Beth Fylan3,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A Personal Health Record (PHR) is an electronic record that individuals use to manage and share their health information, e.g. data from their medical records and data collected by apps. However, engagement with their record can be low if people do not find it beneficial to their health, wellbeing or interactions with health and other services. We have explored the beliefs potential users have about a PHR, how it could be made personally relevant, and barriers to its use.Entities:
Keywords: Electronic health record; Health communication; Patient acceptance; Patient-centred care; Personal health record; eHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29898730 PMCID: PMC6001055 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3254-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Aspects of the PHR discussed during focus groups
| Group and item | Approach |
|---|---|
| Structures | |
| Data type | Discussed during the focus groups. |
| Standards | Neither discussed nor specified. |
| Functions | |
| User profiles | Discussed during the focus groups. |
| Interaction | Specified as direct (patients own and manage data in their PHR). |
| Data source | Discussed during the focus groups. |
| Goals | Discussed during the focus groups. |
| Architecture | |
| Model | Specified as inside: the PHR is stored by the provider. |
| Coverage | Discussed during the focus groups. |
Composition of focus groups
| Group | Composition and characteristics |
|---|---|
| FG1 | Six participants who all had one or more long-term health conditions including: diabetes, coronary heart disease, asthma and mobility problems. |
| FG2 | Eight participants all with long-term health conditions. In addition to their own health problems, two participants were carers for relatives. |
| FG3 | Seven young people aged 14–18. They were all at school or at college. None had any health conditions. |
| FG4 | Seven young adults aged 18–24. They were either studying or working. None had any health conditions. Discussions in this group also explored the health concerns young adults have and the transition to being responsible for their own health. |
| FG5 | Seven older adults, aged 60–85. Discussions in this group also included willingness to learn to use new technologies. |
| FG6 | Seven amateur triathletes who all use devices to monitor their health and training. Discussions in this group also explored how they could use the data they collect to benefit their health and healthcare. |
| FG7 | Seven participants, all with a professional interest in data use. This group also explored how future developments in technology might affect how people could use a PHR. |
| FG8 | Six voluntary sector workers who represented organisations providing advocacy services for people with a range of disabilities and physical and mental health conditions. These participants discussed how they would personally use a PHR, how the people their organisation work with might use one, and how their organisation might interact with their service users’ personal health records. |
Fig. 1Thematic map of what people think about a personal health record