Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA, United States.
Division of Primary Care and Population Health, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA, United States.
JMIR Med Educ. 2024 Oct 1;10:e57077. doi: 10.2196/57077.
Limited digital literacy is a barrier for vulnerable patients accessing health care.
The Stanford Technology Access Resource Team (START), a service-learning course created to bridge the telehealth digital divide, trained undergraduate and graduate students to provide hands-on patient support to improve access to electronic medical records (EMRs) and video visits while learning about social determinants of health.
START students reached out to 1185 patients (n=711, 60% from primary care clinics of a large academic medical center and n=474, 40% from a federally qualified health center). Registries consisted of patients without an EMR account (at primary care clinics) or patients with a scheduled telehealth visit (at a federally qualified health center). Patient outcomes were evaluated by successful EMR enrollments and video visit setups. Student outcomes were assessed by reflections coded for thematic content.
Over 6 academic quarters, 57 students reached out to 1185 registry patients. Of the 229 patients contacted, 141 desired technical support. START students successfully established EMR accounts and set up video visits for 78.7% (111/141) of patients. After program completion, we reached out to 13.5% (19/141) of patients to collect perspectives on program utility. The majority (18/19, 94.7%) reported that START students were helpful, and 73.7% (14/19) reported that they had successfully connected with their health care provider in a digital visit. Inability to establish access included a lack of Wi-Fi or device access, the absence of an interpreter, and a disability that precluded the use of video visits. Qualitative analysis of student reflections showed an impact on future career goals and improved awareness of health disparities of technology access.
Of the patients who desired telehealth access, START improved access for 78.7% (111/141) of patients. Students found that START broadened their understanding of health disparities and social determinants of health and influenced their future career goals.
有限的数字素养是弱势群体获取医疗保健的障碍。
斯坦福技术获取资源团队(START)是一门服务学习课程,旨在弥合远程医疗数字鸿沟,该课程培训本科生和研究生为患者提供实际支持,以改善电子病历(EMR)和视频访问的获取途径,同时了解健康的社会决定因素。
START 学生联系了 1185 名患者(n=711,60%来自大型学术医疗中心的初级保健诊所,n=474,40%来自联邦合格的健康中心)。患者登记册包括没有 EMR 账户的患者(在初级保健诊所)或有计划进行远程医疗访问的患者(在联邦合格的健康中心)。通过成功的 EMR 注册和视频访问设置来评估患者结果。通过对主题内容进行编码来评估学生的学习成果。
在六个学术季度中,57 名学生联系了 1185 名登记册患者。在联系的 229 名患者中,有 141 名患者需要技术支持。START 学生成功为 78.7%(111/141)的患者建立了 EMR 账户并设置了视频访问。在项目完成后,我们联系了 13.5%(19/141)的患者,以收集他们对项目实用性的看法。大多数患者(18/19,94.7%)认为 START 学生很有帮助,73.7%(19/19)的患者报告说他们已经成功地在数字访问中与他们的医疗保健提供者建立了联系。无法建立访问权限包括缺乏 Wi-Fi 或设备访问、缺乏口译员以及残疾导致无法使用视频访问。对学生反思的定性分析表明,这对他们未来的职业目标和提高对技术获取健康差异的认识产生了影响。
在渴望远程医疗服务的患者中,START 成功为 78.7%(111/141)的患者提供了帮助。学生们发现 START 扩大了他们对健康差异和健康的社会决定因素的理解,并影响了他们未来的职业目标。