Patients Know Best: Qualitative Study on How Families Use Patient-Controlled Personal Health Records

被引:18
|
作者
Schneider, Hanna [1 ,2 ]
Hill, Susan [3 ]
Blandford, Ann [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] UCL, UCLIC, Gower St, London WC1E 6BT, England
[2] Univ Munich, Human Comp Interact Grp, Munich, Germany
[3] Great Ormond St Hosp Sick Children, London, England
[4] UCL, Inst Digital Hlth, Gower St, London WC1E 6BT, England
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
electronic health record; patient empowerment; self-determination theory; SELF-DETERMINATION THEORY; HELD RECORD; EMPOWERMENT; CARE; INFORMATION; COMMUNICATION; DISEASE;
D O I
10.2196/jmir.4652
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Self-management technologies, such as patient-controlled electronic health records (PCEHRs), have the potential to help people manage and cope with disease. Objective: This study set out to investigate patient families' lived experiences of working with a PCEHR. Methods: We conducted a semistructured qualitative field study with patient families and clinicians at a children's hospital in the UK that uses a PCEHR (Patients Know Best). All families were managing the health of a child with a serious chronic condition, who was typically under the care of multiple clinicians. As data gathering and analysis progressed, it became clear that while much of the literature assumes that patients are willing and waiting to take more responsibility for and control over their health management (eg, with PCEHRs), only a minority of participants in our study responded in this way. Their experiences with the PCEHR were diverse and strongly shaped by their coping styles. Theory on coping identifies a continuum of coping styles, from approach to avoidance oriented, and proposes that patients' information needs depend on their style. Results: We identified 3 groups of patient families and an outlier, distinguished by their coping style and their PCEHR use. We refer to the outlier as controlling (approach oriented, highly motivated to use PCEHR), and the 3 groups as collaborating (approach oriented, motivated to use PCEHR), cooperating (avoidance oriented, less motivated to use PCEHR), and avoiding (very avoidance oriented, not motivated to use PCEHR). Conclusions: The PCEHR met the needs of controller and collaborators better than the needs of cooperators and avoiders. We draw on the Self-Determination Theory to propose ways in which a PCEHR design might better meet the needs of avoidance-oriented users. Further, we highlight the need for families to also relinquish control at times, and propose ways in which PCEHR design might support a better distribution of control, based on effective training, ease of use, comprehensibility of data security mechanisms, timely information provision (recognizing people's different needs), personalization of use, and easy engagement with clinicians through the PCEHR.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Patient and Physician Willingness to Use Personal Health Records in the Emergency Department
    Menon, Anil S.
    Greenwald, Sally
    Ma, Trisha J.
    Kooshesh, Shoreh
    Duriseti, Ram
    [J]. WESTERN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2012, 13 (02) : 172 - 175
  • [22] A Qualitative Study of How Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Use an Electronic Stand-Alone Personal Health Record
    Fuji, Kevin T.
    Abbott, Amy A.
    Galt, Kimberly A.
    [J]. TELEMEDICINE AND E-HEALTH, 2015, 21 (04) : 296 - 300
  • [23] Barriers to the use of personal health records by patients: a structured review
    Showell, Chris
    [J]. PEERJ, 2017, 5
  • [24] Feeling safe with patient-controlled admissions: A grounded theory study of the mental health patients' experiences
    Ellegaard, Trine
    Bliksted, Vibeke
    Mehlsen, Mimi
    Lomborg, Kirsten
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, 2020, 29 (13-14) : 2397 - 2409
  • [25] Age is not an impediment to effective use of patient-controlled analgesia by surgical patients
    Gagliese, L
    Jackson, M
    Ritvo, P
    Wowk, A
    Katz, J
    [J]. ANESTHESIOLOGY, 2000, 93 (03) : 601 - 610
  • [26] Use of patient-controlled psychiatric hospital admissions: mental health professionals' perspective
    Ellegaard, Trine
    Mehlsen, Mimi
    Lomborg, Kirsten
    Bliksted, Vibeke
    [J]. NORDIC JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2017, 71 (05) : 362 - 369
  • [27] Competitive pricing is not a barrier to meaningful use of patient portals and personal health records among adolescent patients
    Ahsan, Nabiha
    Zhao, Jane
    Winkelstein, Peter
    Panesar, Mandip
    [J]. PEDIATRICS, 2018, 142
  • [28] Use of term "patient-controlled" may be confusing in study of elastometric pump
    Ilfeld, BM
    Morey, TE
    [J]. ANESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA, 2003, 97 (03): : 916 - 917
  • [29] How are personal child health records completed? A multicentric evaluation study
    Vincelet, C
    Tabone, MD
    Berthier, M
    Bonnefoi, MC
    Chevallier, B
    Lemaire, JP
    Dommergues, JP
    [J]. ARCHIVES DE PEDIATRIE, 2003, 10 (05): : 403 - 409
  • [30] Pragmatic Randomized, Controlled Trial of Patient Navigators and Enhanced Personal Health Records in CKD
    Navaneethan, Sankar D.
    Jolly, Stacey E.
    Schold, Jesse D.
    Arrigain, Susana
    Nakhoul, Georges
    Konig, Victoria
    Hyland, Jennifer
    Burrucker, Yvette K.
    Dann, Priscilla Davis
    Tucky, Barbara H.
    Sharp, John
    Nally, Joseph V.
    [J]. CLINICAL JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY, 2017, 12 (09): : 1418 - 1427