Ackerman Sara L, Sarkar Urmimala, Tieu Lina, Handley Margaret A, Schillinger Dean, Hahn Kenneth, Hoskote Mekhala, Gourley Gato, Lyles Courtney
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Department of Medicine, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2017 Sep 1;24(5):903-912. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocx015.
US health care institutions are implementing secure websites (patient portals) to achieve federal Meaningful Use (MU) certification. We sought to understand efforts to implement portals in "safety net" health care systems that provide services for low-income populations.
Our rapid ethnography involved visits at 4 California safety net health systems and in-depth interviews at a fifth. Visits included interviews with clinicians and executives ( n = 12), informal focus groups with front-line staff ( n = 35), observations of patient portal sign-up procedures and clinic work, review of marketing materials and portal use data, and a brief survey ( n = 45).
Our findings demonstrate that the health systems devoted considerable effort to enlisting staff support for portal adoption and integrating portal-related work into clinic routines. Although all health systems had achieved, or were close to achieving, MU benchmarks, patients faced numerous barriers to portal use and our participants were uncertain how to achieve and sustain "meaningful use" as defined by and for their patients.
Health systems' efforts to achieve MU certification united clinic staff under a shared ethos of improved quality of care. However, MU's assumptions about patients' demand for electronic access to health information and ability to make use of it directed clinics' attention to enrollment and message routing rather than to the relevance and usability of a tool that is minimally adaptable to the safety net context.
We found a mismatch between MU-based metrics of patient engagement and the priorities and needs of safety net patient populations.
美国医疗保健机构正在实施安全网站(患者门户网站)以获得联邦意义性使用(MU)认证。我们试图了解为低收入人群提供服务的“安全网”医疗保健系统中实施门户网站的努力情况。
我们的快速人种志研究包括对加利福尼亚州4个安全网医疗系统的访问以及对第5个系统的深入访谈。访问包括与临床医生和管理人员的访谈(n = 12)、与一线工作人员的非正式焦点小组讨论(n = 35)、对患者门户网站注册程序和诊所工作的观察、对营销材料和门户网站使用数据的审查以及一项简短调查(n = 45)。
我们的研究结果表明,这些医疗系统在争取工作人员对采用门户网站的支持以及将与门户网站相关的工作融入诊所日常工作方面投入了大量精力。尽管所有医疗系统都已达到或接近达到MU基准,但患者在使用门户网站时面临众多障碍,而且我们的参与者不确定如何实现并维持其患者所定义和所需的“意义性使用”。
医疗系统为获得MU认证所做的努力使诊所工作人员在提高护理质量的共同理念下团结起来。然而,MU关于患者对电子获取健康信息的需求以及使用能力的假设,使诊所将注意力集中在注册和信息路由上,而不是关注一个对安全网环境适应性极低的工具的相关性和可用性。
我们发现基于MU的患者参与度指标与安全网患者群体的优先事项和需求之间存在不匹配。