| Literature DB >> 31928295 |
Adela Grando, Julia Ivanova, Megan Hiestand, Hiral Soni, Anita Murcko, Michael Saks, David Kaufman1, Mary Jo Whitfield2, Christy Dye, Darwyn Chern3, Jonathan Maupin1.
Abstract
This study explores behavioral health professionals' perceptions of granular data. Semi-structured in-person interviews of 20 health professionals were conducted at two different sites. Qualitative and quantitative analysis was performed. While most health professionals agreed that patients should control who accesses their personal medical record (70%), there are certain types of health information that should never be restricted (65%). Emergent themes, including perceived reasons that patients might share or withhold certain types of health information (65%), care coordination (12%), patient comprehension (11%), stigma (5%), trust (3%), sociocultural understanding (3%), and dissatisfaction with consent processes (1%), are explored. The impact of care role (prescriber or non-prescriber) on data-sharing perception is explored as well. This study informs the discussion on developing technology that helps balance provider and patient data-sharing and access needs.Entities:
Keywords: consent; data privacy; health professional perceptions; interview; mental health
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31928295 PMCID: PMC9310560 DOI: 10.1177/1460458219893848
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Informatics J ISSN: 1460-4582 Impact factor: 2.934
Identified themes with definitions and exemplar quotes.
| Themes | Definition | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Patient motivations for sharing data | Topics that health professionals feel impact patients’ decisions to share or not share information | Some of the things that they don’t want to do is releases of information … For example, if they have a new med, and maybe the client has a mom who is considered a liability to the clients or not supportive of the client’s treatment. |
| Coordination of care | How provider role impacts sharing perceptions | I explained it’s a coordination of care, so everybody would be on the same page. So, we want to make sure we’re not giving you medications conflicting with what the medical doctor is giving you … |
| Patient comprehension | Informal and formal knowledge of patient ability to digest information, familiarity with process, questions asked of professionals | I have to say, all the clients know about the HIPAA standard, at least mine … They are very aware of HIPAA, and if they are not, I explain that to them, and it’s like 4 pages. |
| Stigma | Statements about fear or the abnormality/marginalization of an individual or group. Includes factors of stigma (fear of disclosure, discrimination, etc.) | I’ve personally seen outside providers stigmatize these people. They treat them differently. Across the street is one example. They’re so bad to our patients. |
| Trust | Trust between patient and health professional(s) including comfort/discomfort with a health professional | I think over time, with trust, they will share more, but I don’t think they are going to be sharing that much in the beginning. |
| Sociocultural understanding | Socio-economic status, discussion of different cultures, ethnicities, or group understandings | And there’s a couple Asian cultures that were that way, that I had experienced, that don’t open. Kind of proud, “We don’t talk about certain things.” |
| Professionals’ dissatisfaction with forms/system | Aspects of dissatisfaction with the process, his or her involvement in process, and how it impacts patients | I find these forms cumbersome … I’m very familiar with reading extensive text and yet with some of the patients who are not very familiar with reading this much information at once … I’m making a guess that they will not understand everything. |
HIPAA: Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
How non-prescriber and prescriber groups discuss major themes.
| Theme | Total codings per theme | Subcoding theme | % all professionals (no. codes) | % non-prescribers (no. codes) | % prescribers (no. codes) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient motivation | 895 | Share | 42 (379) | 40 (224) | 47 (155) |
| Not share | 58 (516) | 60 (340) | 53 (176) | ||
| Coordination of care | 249 | Share | 71 (178) | 69 (120) | 77 (58) |
| Not share | 29 (71) | 31 (54) | 23 (17) | ||
| Patient comprehension | 250 | n/a | n/a | 158 | 92 |
| Stigma | 111 | Share | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Not share | 100 (111) | 100 (66) | 100 (45) | ||
| Trust | 81 | Share | 100 (81) | 100 (64) | 100 (18) |
| Not share | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | ||
| Sociocultural understanding | 46 | Share | 17 (8) | 12 (4) | 29 (4) |
| Not share | 83 (38) | 88 (28) | 71 (10) | ||
| Professionals’ dissatisfaction with forms/system | 23 | n/a | n/a | (15) | (8) |