| Literature DB >> 35802397 |
Rachael Lear1, Lisa Freise1, Matthew Kybert2, Ara Darzi1, Ana Luisa Neves1, Erik K Mayer1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Errors in electronic health records are known to contribute to patient safety incidents; however, systems for checking the accuracy of patient records are almost nonexistent. Personal health records (PHRs) enabling patient access to and interaction with the clinical records offer a valuable opportunity for patients to actively participate in error surveillance.Entities:
Keywords: digital health literacy; electronic health records; errors; patient participation; patient safety; personal health records
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35802397 PMCID: PMC9308067 DOI: 10.2196/37226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 7.076
Respondent characteristics (N=445).
| Characteristics | Respondents | ||
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| Male | 167 (37.5) | |
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| Female | 276 (62) | |
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| Other | 2 (0.4) | |
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| No response | N/Aa | |
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| <30 | 22 (4.9) | |
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| 31 to 40 | 48 (10.8) | |
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| 41 to 50 | 62 (13.9) | |
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| 51 to 64 | 166 (37.3) | |
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| >65 | 147 (33) | |
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| No response | N/A | |
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| Ethnic minority | 97 (21.8) | |
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| White | 343 (77.1) | |
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| No response | 5 (1.1) | |
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| London | 284 (63.8) | |
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| Other location in England | 145 (32.6) | |
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| No response | 16 (3.6) | |
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| Secondary school or below | 118 (26.5) | |
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| Undergraduate or professional degree | 180 (40.4) | |
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| Postgraduate or higher | 112 (25.2) | |
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| No response | 35 (7.9) | |
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| English | 379 (85.2) | |
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| Non-English | 58 (13) | |
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| No response | 8 (1.8) | |
| eHealth literacy (eHEALSb score), mean (SD; range) | 33.6 (6.4; 8-40) | ||
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| Good or very good | 177 (39.8) | |
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| Neither good nor poor | 106 (23.8) | |
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| Poor or very poor | 162 (36.4) | |
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| No response | 0 (0) | |
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| Not very much | 6 (1.3) | |
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| A moderate amount | 43 (9.7) | |
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| A lot | 116 (26.1) | |
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| Very much | 278 (62.5) | |
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| No response | 2 (0.4) | |
aN/A: not applicable.
beHEALS: eHealth Literacy Scale.
Figure 1Thematic map of barriers to understanding the Care Information Exchange (CIE) information.
Multinomial regression results of users’ sociodemographic characteristics and perceived level of understanding of information in the Care Information Exchange.
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| Yes, to some extent vs no | Yes, definitely vs no | Yes, to some extent vs no | Yes, definitely vs no | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Univariate odds ratio (95% CI) | Univariate odds ratio (95% CI) | Multivariable odds ratio (95% CI) | Multivariable odds ratio (95% CI) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Female | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Male | 0.76 (0.36-1.61) | .47 | 0.49 (0.23-1.06) | .07 | —a | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| ≥65 | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| ≤64 | 1.33 (0.60-2.96) | .48 | 1.58 (0.70-3.57) | .27 | N/Ab | N/A | N/A | N/Ab | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| White | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Ethnic minority | 2.48 (0.72-8.53) | .15 | 3.18 (0.92-10.97) | .07 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Non-English | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| English | 0.41 (0.09-1.78) | .23 | 0.45 (0.10-2.00) | .29 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Secondary or below | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Undergraduate or professional | 0.47 (0.16-1.82) | .18 | 0.66 (0.22-1.96) | .45 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Postgraduate or higher | 0.33 (0.12-1.04) | .06 | 0.58 (0.18-1.82) | .35 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Lower digital health literacy | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Higher digital health literacy | 1.47 (0.51-4.18) | .48 | 6.23 (1.76-22.06) | .005 | 1.51 (0.53-4.34) | .44 | 6.07 (1.70-21.57) | .005 | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Neither good nor poor | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Poor | 1.48 (0.51-4.29) | .48 | 2.58 (0.86-7.75) | .09 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Good | 0.63 (0.25-1.57) | .32 | 1.29 (0.86-7.75) | .60 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Not very much or a moderate amount | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| A lot or very much | 1.08 (0.39-3.01) | .89 | 3.29 (1.04-10.39) | .04 | 0.93 (0.30-2.88) | .90 | 2.99 (0.85-10.61) | .09 | ||||||||||||||||||||
aVariable excluded from the final multivariable model using a backward elimination approach.
bN/A: not applicable (variable excluded from the multivariable analyses because of nonsignificance [P>.25] in the univariate analyses).
Types of errors patients have noticed in their records: themes, subthemes, and illustrative quotes.
| Themes and subthemes | Illustrative quotes | ||
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| Patient details | “incorrect NHSa number” (patient ID 77); “My address is wrong” (patient ID 79). | |
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| Appointments | “Appointment times are incorrect” (patient ID 117); “On one occasion, the system indicated that I had missed an appointment when I was definitely there” (patient ID 178). | |
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| Medical history or diagnoses | “Diagnosis of cancer which I do not have” (patient ID 317); “my GPb said, ‘he became depressed.’ No, I didn’t” (patient ID 120). | |
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| Measurements or results | “A time on a test was wrong” (patient ID 304); “MRSA result appeared on my record for a test I never took” (patient ID 95). | |
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| Medications | “An error on the dosage of one of my medications” (patient ID 280); “I have never received ibuprofen on prescription” (patient ID 128). | |
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| Letters or correspondence | “Incorrect information on discharge notice from A&Ec” (patient ID 173); “Errors in my consultants [sic] letter” (patient ID 271). | |
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| Appointments | “Some appointments are not shown” (patient ID 406). | |
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| Measurements or results | “Blood test and urine results are missing” (patient ID 413). | |
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| Letters or correspondence | “2 notifications disappeared” (patient ID 264). | |
| Conflicting appointment information | “I am shown as having multiple appointments at different dates at the same clinic. The last time I turned up for one of these I was told there was no appointment [...] very confusing!” (patient ID 226). | ||
| Information belonging to a different patient | “Another patient’s clinic letter—major breach of confidence” (patient ID 164). | ||
aNHS: National Health Service.
bGP: general practitioner.
cA&E: accident and emergency.
Multinomial regression results of users’ sociodemographic characteristics and willingness to flag up or correct errors in the Care Information Exchange.
| Characteristics | Flag it upa vs do nothing | Correct it myself vs do nothing | Flag it upa vs do nothing | Correct it myself vs do nothing | |||||||
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| Univariate odds ratio (95% CI) | Univariate odds ratio (95% CI) | Multivariable odds ratio (95% CI) | Multivariable odds ratio (95% CI) | |||||||
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| Female | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||
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| Male | 0.71 (0.25-2.02) | .52 | 0.59 (0.20-1.78) | .35 | N/Ab | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||
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| ≥65 | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||
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| ≤64 | 0.81 (0.25-2.64) | .72 | 0.73 (0.21-2.54) | .62 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||
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| White | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||
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| Ethnic minority | 0.48 (0.16-1.50) | .21 | 0.48 (0.14-1.58) | .23 | —c | — | — | — | ||
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| Non-English | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||
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| English | 3.13 (1.02-9.56) | .05 | 3.59, (0.51-2.69) | .04 | 3.45 (1.11-10.78) | .03 | 5.65 (1.33-24.03) | .02 | ||
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| Secondary or below | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||
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| Undergraduate or professional | 1.57 (0.44-5.6) | .49 | 1.36 (0.36-5.21) | .65 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||
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| Postgraduate or higher | 1.55 (0.36-6.75) | .56 | 1.80 (0.39-8.32) | .45 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||
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| Low digital health literacy | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||
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| High digital health literacy | 2.25 (0.47-10.83) | .31 | 144 (0.28-7.51) | .66 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||
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| Neither good nor poor | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||
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| Poor | 1.45 (0.45-4.68) | .54 | 3.73 (1.00-13.85) | .05 | 1.34 (0.41-4.41) | .63 | 3.35 (0.89-12.61) | .08 | ||
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| Good | 2.61 (0.71-9.58) | .15 | 5.32 (1.27-22.25) | .02 | 2.82 (0.76-10.54) | .12 | 3.84 (1.07-13.75) | .04 | ||
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| Not very much or a moderate amount | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | ||
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| A lot or very much | 2.09 (0.56-7.78) | .27 | 2.37 (0.56-10.09) | .25 | — | — | — | — | ||
aFlag it up to my health care professional for correction.
bN/A: not applicable (variable excluded from the multivariable analyses because of nonsignificance [P<.25] in univariate analyses).
cVariable excluded from the final multivariable model using a backward elimination approach.