| Literature DB >> 32047860 |
William J Gordon1,2,3, Adam Landman2,3,4, Haipeng Zhang3,5,6, David W Bates1,3.
Abstract
Fueled by advances in technology, increased access to smartphones, and capital investment, the number of available health "apps" has exploded in recent years. Patients use their smartphones for many things, but not as much as they might for health, especially for managing their chronic conditions. Moreover, while significant work is ongoing to develop, validate, and evaluate these apps, it is less clear how to effectively disseminate apps into routine clinical practice. We propose a framework for prescribing apps and outline the key issues that need to be addressed to enable app dissemination in clinical care. This includes: education and awareness, creating digital formularies, workflow and EHR integration, payment models, and patient/provider support. As work in digital health continues to expand, integrating health apps into clinical care delivery will be critical if digital health is to achieve its potential.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic markers; Health services; Signs and symptoms
Year: 2020 PMID: 32047860 PMCID: PMC6997363 DOI: 10.1038/s41746-019-0212-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Digit Med ISSN: 2398-6352
Prescribing apps as a component of clinical workflow. A smoking cessation app is used as an example.
| Workflow Component | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 45 y/o male presents to his PCP interested in smoking cessation | ||
| Searchable and Orderable | • Provider searches for an app within their EHR application • The search cross-references the organization’s digital formulary and the patient’s pharmacy benefit digital formulary to ensure access and coverage • Provider selects the app and opens an order screen | • Provider searches for “Smoking Cessation” and finds a set of available, covered apps that address smoking cessation. Provider selects an approved smoking cessation app and enters the order screen. |
| Clinical Decision Support Integration | • Apps trigger EHR clinical decision support rules • Rules can check for clinical appropriateness, duplicate therapies, other contraindications | • CDS fires and checks that the patient is listed as a current smoker and is not currently prescribed a different app. |
| App Indications | • Provider enters indication for the app • Indication is visible to other providers in the EHR | • Provider enters “Smoking Cessation” under indication. |
| App Directions (the digital “sig”) | • Specific directions for app usage are entered, similar to traditional medication “sig” • Apps may have a list of default sigs, similar to how medications often have default common dosing instructions | • Please install application on your smartphone device and use 3 times daily for 6 months. |
| App Parameterization | • Certain apps may allow for app parameters, which provide settings for the app • Apps will likely have default parameters to select from | • Provider confirms default parameters—for example, “run in background”. |
| EHR Visibility | • Once ordered, apps are visible in the EHR, so that other providers can see a list of prescribed apps, along with their indication, directions, and parameters • Historical apps can be “re-activated” if clinically appropriate | • Once prescribed, smoking cessation app shows up in the patient’s list of current medications and therapies. |
| Data Integration | • App results can be surfaced to providers and patients through existing communication channels, like a patient portal or EHR • Data includes app usage (if acceptable from a patient privacy perspective) and any output | • Overall smoking trends and number of cigarettes smoked / prevented are displayed in tabular and graphical formats. • Patients can see this through the app, or through their patient portal. • Provider can monitor patient usage of the smoking cessation app. |
| De-prescribe | • Apps can be de-prescribed, for example, if they are no longer effective or now contraindicated • Apps can be re-activated in the future | • Patient achieves smoking cessation and app is removed from list of active medications. |