Castaneda Peris, Sales Anne, Osborne Nicholas H, Corriere Matthew A
Department of Surgery, Section of Vascular Surgery, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI; Department of Learning Health Sciences, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI.
Department of Surgery, Section of Vascular Surgery, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI; Department of Learning Health Sciences, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI.
Ann Vasc Surg. 2019 Jan;54:92-102. doi: 10.1016/j.avsg.2018.09.004. Epub 2018 Sep 26.
The availability of electronic health (eHealth) information and disease-related community forums has grown over the last decade. Although patients and families frequently use these resources, their content has not been characterized in terms users, content, or reliability of information. eHealth communities therefore represent a potentially valuable but uncharted source of information about key patient issues, communication terminology, and unmet needs. We hypothesized that eHealth forums would contain terminology, themes, and advice inconsistent with resources from medical providers and references. To test this hypothesis, we performed a qualitative analysis of posts and responses from an open-access peripheral artery disease (PAD) eHealth community forum to characterize the discussion, participants, and the information being exchanged.
Posts were collected from an online PAD Medical Support Community forum (MedHelp), which is open access, does not require participants to identify themselves, and is based in the United States. Posts were selected from threads in which the main topic was PAD, including diagnosis, symptoms, and treatment. Original posts and related responses were analyzed for thematic content, common vernacular, and self-reported characteristics of the participants using a qualitative analysis software program. Disease-specific comments and advice were evaluated for congruence with contemporary PAD treatment guidelines.
A total of 103 posts were collected and analyzed, including 40 original posts and 63 responses. Forty-five percent of the original posts and 19% of the responses were authored by participants who self-identified as patients with PAD. The remaining posts were authored by people with undeclared relationships to patients with PAD, followed by children, spouses, and other relatives. The most common themes among original posts included PAD diagnosis (and differential) (25%), treatment (23%), epidemiology and pathophysiology (21%), disease symptoms and impacts on activities of daily living (15%), and health-care provider recommendations (13%). Themes of responses included medical advice (40.5%), personal experiences with PAD (32.8%), and social support (12.6%). Negative attitudes were identified in 10 of 18 (55.6%) posts related to experiences with health-care providers. Of all medical advice, 15.1% was inconsistent with clinical treatment guidelines.
eHealth communities are a rich source of information related to the experiences of patients with PAD, their treatment preferences, questions they consider important, and terminology that they use. This information can be used to understand unmet patient needs, develop educational resources, and improve communication.
在过去十年中,电子健康(eHealth)信息和疾病相关社区论坛的可用性有所增加。尽管患者和家属经常使用这些资源,但其内容在用户、内容或信息可靠性方面尚未得到描述。因此,电子健康社区代表了一个潜在的有价值但尚未被探索的信息来源,涉及关键的患者问题、交流术语和未满足的需求。我们假设电子健康论坛包含的术语、主题和建议与医疗服务提供者的资源及参考文献不一致。为了验证这一假设,我们对一个开放获取的外周动脉疾病(PAD)电子健康社区论坛的帖子和回复进行了定性分析,以描述讨论内容、参与者以及正在交流的信息。
从一个在线PAD医疗支持社区论坛(MedHelp)收集帖子,该论坛开放获取,不要求参与者表明身份,且位于美国。帖子从主要主题为PAD的讨论线程中选取,包括诊断、症状和治疗。使用定性分析软件程序对原始帖子和相关回复进行主题内容、常用白话以及参与者自我报告特征的分析。针对特定疾病的评论和建议,评估其与当代PAD治疗指南的一致性。
共收集并分析了103个帖子,包括40个原始帖子和63个回复。45%的原始帖子和19%的回复由自我认定为PAD患者的参与者撰写。其余帖子由与PAD患者关系未声明的人撰写,其次是子女、配偶和其他亲属。原始帖子中最常见的主题包括PAD诊断(及鉴别诊断)(25%)、治疗(23%)、流行病学和病理生理学(21%)、疾病症状及对日常生活活动的影响(15%)以及医疗服务提供者的建议(13%)。回复的主题包括医疗建议(40.5%)、PAD的个人经历(32.8%)和社会支持(12.6%)。在18个与医疗服务提供者经历相关的帖子中,有10个(55.6%)表现出负面态度。在所有医疗建议中,15.1%与临床治疗指南不一致。
电子健康社区是与PAD患者经历、治疗偏好、他们认为重要的问题以及使用的术语相关的丰富信息来源。这些信息可用于了解未满足的患者需求、开发教育资源并改善交流。