Portz Jennifer Dickman, Fruhauf Christine, Bull Sheana, Boxer Rebecca S, Bekelman David B, Casillas Alejandra, Gleason Kathy, Bayliss Elizabeth A
Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, United States.
Institute for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Colorado, Aurora, CO, United States.
JMIR Aging. 2019 Jun 6;2(1):e13713. doi: 10.2196/13713.
Although family technical support seems intuitive, there is very little research exploring this topic.
The objective of this study was to conduct a subanalysis of data collected from a large-scale qualitative project regarding older adults' experiences in using health information technology. Specifically, the subanalysis explored older adults' experiences with technology support from family members to inform strategies for promoting older adults' engagement with new health technologies. Although the primary analysis of the original study was theoretically driven, this paper reports results from an inductive, open-coding analysis.
This is a subanalysis of a major code identified unexpectedly from a qualitative study investigating older adults' use experience of a widespread health technology, the patient portal. A total of 24 older patients (≥65 years) with multiple chronic conditions (Charlson Comorbidity Index >2) participated in focus groups conducted at the patients' primary clinic. While conducting the primary theoretically driven analysis, coders utilized an open-coding approach to ensure important ideas not reflected in the theoretical code book were captured. Open coding resulted in 1 code: family support. This subanalysis further categorized family support by who provided tech support, how tech support was offered, and the opinions of older participants about receiving family tech support.
The participants were not specifically asked about family support, yet themes around family assistance and encouragement for technology emerged from every focus group. Participants repeatedly mentioned that they called their grandchildren and adult children if they needed help with technology. Participants also reported that family members experienced difficulty when teaching technology use. Family members struggled to explain simple technology tasks and were frustrated by the slow teaching process.
The results suggest that older adults ask their family members, particularly grandchildren, to support them in the use of new technologies. However, family may experience difficulties in providing this support. Older adults will be increasingly expected to use health technologies, and family members may help with tech support. Providers and health systems should consider potential family support and engagement strategies to foster adoption and use among older patients.
尽管家庭技术支持似乎是理所当然的,但很少有研究探讨这一主题。
本研究的目的是对从一个关于老年人使用健康信息技术体验的大规模定性项目中收集的数据进行子分析。具体而言,该子分析探讨了老年人在获得家庭成员技术支持方面的体验,以为促进老年人参与新健康技术的策略提供信息。尽管原始研究的主要分析是理论驱动的,但本文报告的是归纳性开放编码分析的结果。
这是对一项定性研究中意外发现的一个主要编码进行的子分析,该定性研究调查了老年人对一种广泛使用的健康技术——患者门户网站的使用体验。共有24名患有多种慢性病(查尔森合并症指数>2)的老年患者(≥65岁)参加了在其初级诊所进行的焦点小组讨论。在进行主要的理论驱动分析时,编码人员采用开放编码方法,以确保捕捉到理论编码手册中未反映的重要观点。开放编码产生了一个编码:家庭支持。该子分析进一步根据谁提供技术支持、如何提供技术支持以及老年参与者对接受家庭技术支持的看法对家庭支持进行了分类。
参与者并未被专门问及家庭支持,但每个焦点小组都出现了围绕家庭在技术方面的帮助和鼓励的主题。参与者多次提到,如果他们在技术方面需要帮助,会打电话给孙子孙女和成年子女。参与者还报告说,家庭成员在教授技术使用时遇到困难。家庭成员难以解释简单的技术任务,并且对缓慢的教学过程感到沮丧。
结果表明,老年人会要求家庭成员,特别是孙子孙女,在使用新技术方面给予支持。然而,家庭在提供这种支持时可能会遇到困难。预计老年人将越来越多地使用健康技术,家庭成员可能会在技术支持方面提供帮助。医疗服务提供者和卫生系统应考虑潜在的家庭支持和参与策略,以促进老年患者采用和使用这些技术。