Nguyen Oanh Kieu, Chan Connie V, Makam Anil, Stieglitz Heather, Amarasingham Ruben
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Blvd., Mail Code 9169, Dallas, TX, 75390-9169, USA,
J Gen Intern Med. 2015 Jan;30(1):60-7. doi: 10.1007/s11606-014-2969-8. Epub 2014 Aug 5.
Social determinants directly contribute to poorer health, and coordination between healthcare and community-based resources is pivotal to addressing these needs. However, our healthcare system remains poorly equipped to address social determinants of health. The potential of health information technology to bridge this gap across the delivery of healthcare and social services remains unrealized.
OBJECTIVE, DESIGN, AND PARTICIPANTS: We conducted in-depth, in-person interviews with 50 healthcare and social service providers to determine the feasibility of a social-health information exchange (S-HIE) in an urban safety-net setting in Dallas County, Texas. After completion of interviews, we conducted a town hall meeting to identify desired functionalities for a S-HIE.
We conducted thematic analysis of interview responses using the constant comparative method to explore perceptions about current communication and coordination across sectors, and barriers and enablers to S-HIE implementation. We sought participant confirmation of findings and conducted a forced-rank vote during the town hall to prioritize potential S-HIE functionalities.
We found that healthcare and social service providers perceived a need for improved information sharing, communication, and care coordination across sectors and were enthusiastic about the potential of a S-HIE, but shared many technical, legal, and ethical concerns around cross-sector information sharing. Desired technical S-HIE functionalities encompassed fairly simple transactional operations such as the ability to view basic demographic information, visit and referral data, and medical history from both healthcare and social service settings.
A S-HIE is an innovative and feasible approach to enabling better linkages between healthcare and social service providers. However, to develop S-HIEs in communities across the country, policy interventions are needed to standardize regulatory requirements, to foster increased IT capability and uptake among social service agencies, and to align healthcare and social service priorities to enable dissemination and broader adoption of this and similar IT initiatives.
社会决定因素直接导致健康状况较差,医疗保健与社区资源之间的协调对于满足这些需求至关重要。然而,我们的医疗保健系统在应对健康的社会决定因素方面仍然准备不足。健康信息技术在弥合医疗保健和社会服务提供之间差距方面的潜力尚未得到实现。
目的、设计和参与者:我们对50名医疗保健和社会服务提供者进行了深入的面对面访谈,以确定在德克萨斯州达拉斯县的城市安全网环境中建立社会健康信息交换(S-HIE)的可行性。访谈完成后,我们召开了一次市政厅会议,以确定S-HIE所需的功能。
我们使用持续比较法对访谈回复进行主题分析,以探讨对当前跨部门沟通与协调的看法,以及S-HIE实施的障碍和促进因素。我们寻求参与者对研究结果的确认,并在市政厅会议期间进行强制排序投票,以确定潜在的S-HIE功能的优先级。
我们发现,医疗保健和社会服务提供者认为需要改善跨部门的信息共享、沟通和护理协调,并对S-HIE的潜力充满热情,但在跨部门信息共享方面也有许多技术、法律和伦理方面的担忧。理想的S-HIE技术功能包括相当简单的事务性操作,例如能够查看基本人口统计信息、就诊和转诊数据以及来自医疗保健和社会服务环境的病史。
S-HIE是一种创新且可行的方法,可促进医疗保健和社会服务提供者之间建立更好的联系。然而,要在全国各社区发展S-HIE,需要政策干预来规范监管要求,促进社会服务机构提高信息技术能力并采用信息技术,并使医疗保健和社会服务优先事项保持一致,以推动这项及类似信息技术举措的传播和更广泛采用。