| Literature DB >> 35442199 |
Julia Ivanova1, Tianyu Tang2, Nassim Idouraine3, Anita Murcko3, Mary Jo Whitfield4, Christy Dye5, Darwyn Chern5, Adela Grando3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient-controlled granular information sharing (PC-GIS) allows a patient to select specific health information "granules," such as diagnoses and medications; choose with whom the information is shared; and decide how the information can be used. Previous studies suggest that health professionals have mixed or concerned opinions about the process and impact of PC-GIS for care and research. Further understanding of behavioral health professionals' views on PC-GIS are needed for successful implementation and use of this technology.Entities:
Keywords: behavioral health professional; electronic consent tool; electronic health record; granular information; granular information sharing; integrated health care
Year: 2022 PMID: 35442199 PMCID: PMC9069278 DOI: 10.2196/21208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Ment Health ISSN: 2368-7959
Categorized survey prompts.
| Category and prompt aims | Specific survey promptsa | ||||||
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| No. | Phrasing | Directionality | ||||
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| 2 | I am comfortable with patients restricting my seeing some parts of their EHRb. | Positive | |||
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| 4 | I think it is OK for patients to have control over who sees what information in their EHR. | Positive | |||
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| 6 | It is a good thing for patients to have control over who sees their EHR. | Positive | |||
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| 1 | I believe that patients understand what an EHR is. | Positive | |||
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| 8 | The patient owns the information in his or her EHR. | Neutral | |||
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| 9 | As a patient, I would like to control the information in my EHR that providers can see. | Positive | |||
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| 3 | My patients’ EHRs are viewed only by people who should have access to them. | Positive | |||
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| 5 | Patients preventing me from seeing part or all of their EHR could affect my relationships with them. | Neutral | |||
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| 7 | Restricting access to all or part of a patient’s EHR will likely reduce the quality of care I deliver. | Negative | |||
aSurvey prompts were grouped by overarching themes and classified as positive, neutral, or negative based on framing. Prompt numbers (eg, prompt 2) refer to chronology of the survey, following placement by Tierney et al [26].
bEHR: electronic health record.
Figure 1Focus group flow. Section themes are shown on the left with representative questions for each section on the right (numbered). This figure was adapted from Ivanova et al [27].
Participant roles and population representation.
| Role typea | Participants, n (%)b | ||
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| General behavioral health facility (n=14) | Serious mental illness facility (n=14) | Total (N=28) |
| Counselors | 3 (21) | 1 (7) | 4 (14) |
| Nurses | 1 (7) | 2 (14) | 3 (11) |
| Rehabilitation specialists | 1 (7) | 2 (14) | 3 (11) |
| Case managers | 1 (7) | 2 (14) | 3 (11) |
| Clinical coordinators | 3 (21) | 0 (0) | 3 (11) |
| Administrators | 0 (0) | 3 (21) | 3 (11) |
| Physicians (prescribers) | 2 (14) | 1 (7) | 3 (11) |
| Nurse practitioners (prescribers) | 2 (14) | 0 (0) | 2 (7) |
| Peer mentors | 0 (0) | 1 (7) | 1 (4) |
| Medical assistants | 0 (0) | 1 (7) | 1 (4) |
| Discharge planners | 0 (0) | 1 (7) | 1 (4) |
| Social workers | 1 (7) | 0 (0) | 1 (4) |
aThe table, taken from Ivanova et al [27], groups participants by role types (prescribers are indicated) and patient population.
bPercentages may not add up to 100 due to rounding.
Results of the descriptive statistics for the pre- and postsurveys.
| Prompt no. | Prompt aim | Prompt directionality | Presurvey scorea, mean (SE) | Postsurvey scorea, mean (SE) | |
| 1 | Patient understanding | Positive | 3.5 (0.2) | 2.5c (0.2) | .001 |
| 2 | Patient control acceptance | Positive | 3.5 (0.3) | 2.3 (0.3) | <.001 |
| 3 | Authorized EHRd access | Positive | 4.5c (0.2) | 3.7c (0.3) | .03 |
| 4 | Patient control acceptance | Positive | 3.9c (0.3) | 2.2c (0.2) | <.001 |
| 5 | Patient-professional relationship | Neutral | 3.2 (0.3) | 4.0c (0.2) | .006 |
| 6 | Patient control acceptance | Positive | 3.8c (0.2) | 2.7c (0.3) | .005 |
| 7 | Quality of care | Negative | 3.6 (0.3) | 3.9c (0.3) | .16 |
| 8 | Patient rights | Neutral | 3.6 (0.3) | 3.3 (0.3) | .40 |
| 9 | Patient rights | Positive | 3.8c (0.3) | 3.1c (0.2) | .02 |
aThe survey scores ranged from 1.00 (“strong disagreement”) to 5.00 (“strong agreement”).
bP values were based on the pre- to postsurvey change using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test.
cThese statistics are strongly within overall agreement (mean >3.5, including SE) or disagreement (mean <2.5, including SE).
dEHR: electronic health record.
Pre- and postsurvey exploratory factor analysis loadings.
| Prompt no. | Presurvey component, factor analysis loadinga | Postsurvey component, factor analysis loadinga | |||||
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| Patient control acceptance | Professional considerations | Patient rights | Patient understanding | Patient control acceptance | Patient rights | Professional considerations |
| 1 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.1 | 0.9b | 0.4 | 0.8b | 0.1 |
| 2 | 0.8b | 0.1 | 0.0 | –0.1 | 0.4 | 0.6b | 0.3 |
| 3 | –0.1 | –0.8b | 0.4 | –0.2 | –0.5 | 0.7b | 0.4 |
| 4 | 1.0b | 0.0 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.7b | 0.4 | 0.3 |
| 5 | –0.2 | 0.7b | 0.2 | –0.4 | –0.2 | 0.1 | –0.9b |
| 6 | 0.8b | –0.2 | 0.1 | 0.3 | 0.8b | 0.2 | 0.3 |
| 7 | –0.1 | 0.8b | 0.4 | –0.1 | –0.4 | –0.3 | –0.6b |
| 8 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.9b | 0.1 | 0.2 | 0.8b | –0.1 |
| 9 | 0.9b | –0.1 | –0.1 | –0.2 | 0.8b | 0.2 | 0.2 |
aNegative loadings are due to directionality of prompts and are not significant. Scree plot results ensured overall viability of components.
bThis value is this prompt’s highest absolute loading for this component.
Figure 2Emergent themes and subthemes from focus group thematic analysis on patient-controlled granular information sharing (PC-GIS). There were a total of 4025 codes.
Definitions of subthemes for coding and quotations.
| Themes and subthemes | Definition | Example quotation | |||
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| Reactions | How professionals react to definitions, case examples, questions, etc | “Yeah, I would be worried that the patient doesn’t share the right information with the right provider.” [Prescriber] | ||
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| Necessity of health information | When a professional references the need for pertinent health information at the point of care | “Patients if they did have a mental illness they’re taking psychiatric medications they’re not going to disclose to the PCPa the meds they’re taking, you can’t check for interactions and then just can’t provide good care.” [Prescriber] | ||
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| Talking with patient | How professionals talk with and seek health information from patients | “Just ask what they’re being treated for those conditions, and so what are they taking.” [Nonprescriber] | ||
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| Patient-professional relationship | When linking the patient-professional relationship to granular data sharing | “Kind of going back to [the] gender dysphoria thing...That is also something that I would want to know because I would want you to be comfortable, and so, I’d want to make sure that I’m referring to you how you want to be as and using the name you want to be known by. And I’d want my office to do the same thing. So, that kind of stuff is also important to know too.” [Prescriber] | ||
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| Professional risks and rights | When a professional considers their own personal risks related to granular data sharing | “Yeah, be it the actual patient or the provider, life being put in jeopardy by not having certain information. I’m thinking more than HIV AIDS...” [Nonprescriber] | ||
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| Patient perspective | When a professional responds from a patient perspective | “I think more how the patient perceives the information is more sensitive. This is more than perception.”b [Nonprescriber] | ||
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| Patient rights | When a professional references federal or state statutes regarding patient rights | “I really think it is hard because I’ve talked to a lot of people who say that their medical doctors don’t understand the behavioral health side. So if they, if it wasn’t affecting their behavioral health or their medical health, then I think they should have the right to not talk about it if they don’t feel comfortable.” [Nonprescriber] | ||
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| Concept comprehension | When a professional refers to a patient’s uninformed or potentially risky data sharing choices | “But I’ve also seen people’s lives be put in jeopardy because maybe, whether it be a paranoia or just not understanding or something, I don’t want anything shared or, like provider six said, we’ve had it—maybe there is a substance abuse issue.” [Nonprescriber] | ||
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| Health care system | When a professional refers to sharing information for care coordination with others throughout the health care system | “Not necessarily with that topic that I think if a patient has seen numerous doctors, they all should be on the same page with medications because of any contraindications.” [Nonprescriber] | ||
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| Patient education | When a professional describes or references patient education about granular information sharing | “Tell them the reason why we’re asking, the importance of it, and to help them understand why we need the information.” [Nonprescriber] | ||
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| Outside institutions | When a professional refers to external institutions and organizations with legal control over health data sharing (eg, Department of Homeland Security, courts, law enforcement, and Department of Public Safety) | “I think that’s one of the things that a lot of our patients that they have a legal background or on court-ordered treatment, meaning, they are not necessarily wanting treatment, but the court says that they have to. It is a valid reason for them to be a little nervous and stuff, because ‘what are you going to tell, are you just trying to get more information so I can go back to jail...’” [Nonprescriber] | ||
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| Costs | When a professional highlights the fiscal aspects of granular data sharing (eg, costs to patient, institution, and system) | “I was thinking from a cost perspective. Granular information sharing could increase cost because if you don’t give all the information, I could see a provider redoing things that have already began so they can get the information they need to make a good decision. Whereas, if they have that information and knew what the history was, they would know where to start instead of having to start all the time from the beginning.” [Nonprescriber] | ||
aPCP: primary care physician.
bAll participants in the focus group agreed with this comment.
cPC-GIS: patient-controlled granular information sharing.
Descriptive statistics by predominant patient population.
| Prompt no. | Prompt aim | Prompt directionality | Presurvey scorea, mean (SE) | Postsurvey scorea, mean (SE) | |||||
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| GBHb | SMIc | GBH | SMI | |||
| 1 | Patient understanding | Positive | 3.3 (0.3) | 3.7 (0.2)e | 2.3 (0.3) | .03 | 2.7 (0.3) | .02 | |
| 2 | Patient control acceptance | Positive | 3.1 (0.4) | 3.9 (0.3)e | 1.7 (0.3)e | .007 | 3.0 (0.4) | .02 | |
| 3 | Authorized EHRf access | Positive | 4.1 (0.4)e | 4.8 (0.1)e | 3.8 (0.4) | .47 | 3.7 (0.4) | .01 | |
| 4 | Patient control acceptance | Positive | 3.4 (0.4) | 4.5 (0.1)e | 1.7 (0.3)e | .009 | 2.8 (0.3) | .004 | |
| 5 | Patient-professional relationship | Neutral | 3.9 (0.3) | 2.5 (0.4) | 4.1 (0.3)d | .41 | 3.8 (0.3)e | .007 | |
| 6 | Patient control acceptance | Positive | 3.4 (0.4) | 4.1 (0.2)e | 2.4 (0.4) | .28 | 3.2 (0.4) | .16 | |
| 7 | Quality of care | Negative | 4.0 (0.3)e | 3.2 (0.5) | 4.4 (0.3)e | .01 | 3.4 (0.4) | .43 | |
| 8 | Patient rights | Neutral | 3.6 (0.4) | 3.6 (0.4) | 2.9 (0.4) | .10 | 3.8 (0.4) | .72 | |
| 9 | Patient rights | Positive | 3.1 (0.4) | 4.5 (0.2)e | 2.4 (0.3) | .19 | 3.8 (0.3) | .03 | |
aThe survey scores ranged from 1.00 (“strong disagreement”) to 5.00 (“strong agreement”).
bGBH: general behavioral health.
cSMI: serious mental illness.
dP values were based on the pre- to postsurvey change using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test.
eThese values are in overall agreement (including SE) or disagreement (including SE).
fEHR: electronic health record.
Complex coding query results of topic perceptions.
| Topics, themes, and participant perception | Instances of perceptions for each topic by facility, n (%) | |||
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| General behavioral health facility | Serious mental illness facility | ||
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| Negative (n=0) | N/Aa | N/A | |
| Positive (n=1) | 1 (100) | 0 (0) | ||
| Mixed (n=4) | 2 (50) | 2 (50) | ||
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| Negative (n=4) | 4 (100) | 0 (0) | |
| Positive (n=4) | 3 (75) | 1 (25) | ||
| Mixed (n=3) | 1 (33) | 2 (67) | ||
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| Negative (n=1) | 1 (100) | 0 (0) | |
| Positive (n=2) | 1 (50) | 1 (50) | ||
| Mixed (n=0) | N/A | N/A | ||
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| Negative (n=15) | 11 (73) | 4 (27) | |
| Positive (n=3) | 3 (100) | 0 (0) | ||
| Mixed (n=5) | 5 (100) | 0 (0) | ||
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| Negative (n=0) | N/A | N/A | |
| Positive (n=10) | 10 (100) | 0 (0) | ||
| Mixed (n=3) | 3 (100) | 0 (0) | ||
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| Negative (n=3) | 2 (67) | 1 (33) | |
| Positive (n=2) | 0 (0) | 2 (100) | ||
| Mixed (n=3) | 0 (0) | 3 (100) | ||
aN/A: not applicable; there were no instances of this perception regarding this topic.