| Literature DB >> 31053063 |
Jennifer L Hefner1,2,3, Sarah R MacEwan4, Alison Biltz5, Cynthia J Sieck6,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient portal secure messaging (asynchronous electronic communication between physicians and their established patients) allows patients to manage their care through asynchronous, direct communication with their providers. This type of engagement with health information technology could have important benefits for patients with chronic conditions, and a more thorough understanding of the use and barriers of secure messaging among this population is needed. The objective of this study was to explore how experienced portal users engage with secure messaging to manage their chronic conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic conditions; Patient engagement; Patient portals; Secure messaging
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31053063 PMCID: PMC6499960 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-019-0948-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Patient-reported motivations and uses of secure messaging for disease management
| Motivations for using messaging | Representative comment |
|
| “I'd rather do that [send a portal message] and wait … I’d rather wait that way as opposed to someone telling me [on the phone] they can’t see me until December.” |
| “Well it saves the phone call, the message, the phone call back.” | |
| “I know that was in the morning, by the noontime I had heard from her via the telephone and she had made arrangements for me to get in to see another doc in this practice so they could do urine specimen but I was able to get some meds quick.” | |
| “It’s a lot quicker [than the phone].” | |
|
| “Saves phone calls, saves this kind of messages from having to go from who answers the phone to the doctor.” |
| “My doctor, she’s really good at checking her email. She says she tries to get in between each person she sees…to see if she has anything new. Which is nice, you know she replies pretty fast.” | |
| “I didn’t want to call the office to go through the gatekeeper, so I wrote [a portal message] hoping that my doctor would read that today.” | |
| Uses of messaging for care management | Representative comment |
|
| “It’s mostly kind of just instead of having to come in for an appointment every week.” |
| “Like if I’m sending a message like this, it’s not something where I’m like ‘I really need to know this right now.’ It’s like, 'Oh hey I thought about this, this is something I don’t want to have like schedule an appointment, I would just like to know the answer sooner rather than later.'” | |
|
| “The other thing I love doing it [sending secure messages] for is sometimes I don’t know what doctor to go to, I was seeing so many specialists I really didn’t know. So, I would go to like my doctor since she was managing my care and say, ‘Who do you feel comfortable with me asking, you know going to?’ And she would always just respond right back and say, ‘You should go to your cardiologist for that,’ or pulmonologist or whatever so that was really helpful.” |
| “After my initial appointment she said you know, she would send me messages about how she set me up for appointments with the neurologist, cardiac, um and a lung test, um some type of test.” | |
| “For instance, I’m having a dental procedure done in May and I might have to stop a blood thinner. I’m just going to email my family doctor and say, 'I need your approval that this is okay, you respond to this MyChart message, I'll print it out and I’ll give it to the guy doing the surgery.'” |
Patient-reported challenges of using secure messaging via a patient portal
| Challenge | Representative comments |
|---|---|
| Technical challenges | “Yeah and I’m thinking and I know this population that comes here, the bulk of the population, don’t necessarily use a computer.” |
| “I recall when it first came out is that there was a significant percentage of patients who did not have computers … There’s still some that don’t feel comfortable and so some cases they would have a son or a daughter do it for them.” | |
| Worry about physician time | “Because of my background I try to keep it concise and short and non-urgent.” |
| “Sometimes I’ll rewrite, maybe I’ll get all wordy and then I’m like that’s too many words. Then I’ll try to be more concise. But then sometimes I’ve found I don’t get necessarily the information I want, sometimes I’m asking for their impression or their feedback about something and maybe that’s not the, I needed to have called for that versus cause it’s not as easy to respond with printed words, I don’t know.” | |
| Determining what constitutes a non-urgent message | “See that’s why I chose not to call the office and take a chance on it being non-urgent, and fortunately my doctor happened to look at hers and responded, but I was prepared just to wait.” |
| “He did do a good job of describing what to message about you know anything serious obviously come in.” | |
| “I had never in my life had anything like that before and I wanted a doctor to say something before I go to emergency.” | |
| “My idea of MyChart was to communicate with my doctor and everything’s not an emergency like giving her in person my blood pressure but that’s what she requested.” |