An analysis of patient-provider secure messaging at two Veterans Health Administration medical centers: message content and resolution through secure messaging

被引:29
|
作者
Shimada, Stephanie L. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Petrakis, Beth Ann
Rothendler, James A.
Zirkle, Maryan [4 ]
Zhao, Shibei
Feng, Hua
Fix, Gemmae M.
Ozkaynak, Mustafa [5 ]
Martin, Tracey [6 ]
Johnson, Sharon A. [7 ]
Tulu, Bengisu [7 ]
Gordon, Howard S. [8 ,9 ]
Simon, Steven R.
Woods, Susan S. [10 ]
机构
[1] Edith Nourse Rogers Mem Vet Hosp, Dept Vet Affairs, Ctr Healthcare Org & Implementat Res CHOIR, Bedford, MA USA
[2] Boston Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Law Policy & Management, Boston, MA USA
[3] Univ Massachusetts, Sch Med, Dept Quantitat Hlth Sci, Div Hlth Informat & Implementat Sci, Bedford, MA USA
[4] Portland VA Med Ctr, Dept Vet Affairs, Portland, OR USA
[5] Univ Colorado, Coll Nursing, Denver, CO 80202 USA
[6] VISN1, Dept Vet Affairs, Bedford, MA USA
[7] Worcester Polytech Inst, Sch Business, Worcester, MA 01609 USA
[8] Jesse Brown VA Med Ctr, Dept Vet Affairs, Ctr Innovat Complex Chron Healthcare, Chicago, IL USA
[9] Univ Illinois, Coll Med, Dept Med, Div Acad Internal Med & Geriatr, Chicago, IL USA
[10] Vet Hlth Adm, Connected Care Off, VA Maine Healthcare Syst, Augusta, ME USA
关键词
personal health records; secure messaging; primary health care; patient-doctor communication; message content; E-MAIL; KAISER PERMANENTE; RECORD; COMMUNICATION; CARE; SYSTEM; PERSPECTIVES; EXPERIENCES; PHYSICIANS; AGREEMENT;
D O I
10.1093/jamia/ocx021
中图分类号
TP [自动化技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
Objective: We sought to understand how patients and primary care teams use secure messaging (SM) to communicate with one another by analyzing secure message threads from 2 Department of Veterans Affairs facilities. Methods: We coded 1000 threads of SM communication sampled from 40 primary care teams. Results: Most threads (94.5%) were initiated by patients (90.4%) or caregivers (4.1%); only 5.5% were initiated by primary care team members proactively reaching out to patients. Medication renewals and refills (47.2%), scheduling requests (17.6%), medication issues (12.9%), and health issues (12.7%) were the most common patient-initiated requests, followed by referrals (7.0%), administrative issues (6.5%), test results (5.4%), test issues (5.2%), informing messages (4.9%), comments about the patient portal or SM(4.1%), appreciation (3.9%), self-reported data (2.8%), life issues (1.5%), and complaints (1.5%). Very few messages were clinically urgent (0.7%) or contained other potentially challenging content. Message threads were mostly short (2.7 messages), comprising an average of 1.35 discrete content types. A substantial proportion of issues (24.2%) did not show any evidence of being resolved through SM. Time to response and extent of resolution via SM varied by message content. Proactive SM use by teams varied, but was most often for test results (32.7%), medication-related issues (21.8%), medication renewals (16.4%), or scheduling issues (18.2%). Conclusions: The majority of messages were transactional and initiated by patients or caregivers. Not all content categories were fully addressed over SM. Further education and training for both patients and clinical teams could improve the quality and efficiency of SM communication.
引用
收藏
页码:942 / 949
页数:8
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