Wallace Lorraine S, Angier Heather, Huguet Nathalie, Gaudino James A, Krist Alex, Dearing Marla, Killerby Marie, Marino Miguel, DeVoe Jennifer E
From the Department of Biomedical Education and Anatomy, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH (LSW); the Oregon Health & Science University (HA, NH, JAG, MK, MM, JED); the Virginia Commonwealth University (AK); and OCHIN, Portland, OR (MD).
J Am Board Fam Med. 2016 Sep-Oct;29(5):592-603. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2016.05.160046.
Underserved patient populations experience barriers to accessing and engaging within the complex health care system. Electronic patient portals have been proposed as a potential new way to improve access and engagement. We studied patient portal use for 12 consecutive months (365 days) among a large, nationally distributed, underserved patient population within the OCHIN (originally created as the Oregon Community Health Information Network and renamed OCHIN as other states joined) practice-based research network (PBRN).
We retrospectively assessed adoption and use of Epic's MyChart patient portal in the first 12 months after MyChart was made available to the OCHIN PBRN. We examined electronic health record data from 36,549 patients aged ≥18 years who were offered a MyChart access code between May 1, 2012, and April 30, 2013, across the OCHIN PBRN in 13 states.
Overall, 29% of patients offered an access code logged into their MyChart account. Superusers (minimum of 2 logins per month over a 12-month period) accounted for 6% of users overall. Men, nonwhite patients, Hispanic patients, Spanish-speaking patients, and those with the lowest incomes were significantly less likely to activate. Publicly insured and uninsured patients were also less likely to log in to their MyChart account, but once activated they were more likely than privately insured patients to use MyChart functions.
Our findings suggest that, compared with others, certain patient groups may be less interested in using patient portals or may have experienced significant barriers that prevented use. Making portal access available is a first step. Additional studies need to specifically identify health system-, clinic-, and patient-level barriers and facilitators to portal adoption and use.
医疗服务不足的患者群体在进入复杂的医疗保健系统并参与其中时面临障碍。电子患者门户网站已被提议作为改善就医机会和参与度的一种潜在新方式。我们在OCHIN(最初创建为俄勒冈社区健康信息网络,随着其他州的加入更名为OCHIN)基于实践的研究网络(PBRN)中,对一大群分布在全国且医疗服务不足的患者群体连续12个月(365天)的患者门户网站使用情况进行了研究。
我们回顾性评估了Epic的MyChart患者门户网站在向OCHIN PBRN提供后的前12个月中的采用和使用情况。我们检查了2012年5月1日至2013年4月30日期间在13个州的OCHIN PBRN中为36549名年龄≥18岁的患者提供MyChart访问代码后获取的电子健康记录数据。
总体而言,获得访问代码的患者中有29%登录了他们的MyChart账户。超级用户(在12个月期间每月至少登录2次)占用户总数的6%。男性、非白人患者、西班牙裔患者、说西班牙语的患者以及收入最低的患者激活的可能性明显较低。公共保险和未参保患者登录MyChart账户的可能性也较小,但一旦激活,他们比私人保险患者更有可能使用MyChart功能。
我们的研究结果表明,与其他患者相比,某些患者群体可能对使用患者门户网站不太感兴趣,或者可能遇到了阻碍使用的重大障碍。提供门户网站访问权限是第一步。需要进一步的研究来具体确定卫生系统、诊所和患者层面阻碍和促进门户网站采用及使用的因素。