Wang Dorothy Yingxuan, Wong Eliza Lai-Yi, Cheung Annie Wai-Ling, Tang Kam-Shing, Yeoh Eng-Kiong
JC School of Public Health and Primary Care, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China (Hong Kong).
Centre for Health Systems & Policy Research, JC School of Public Health and Primary Care, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China (Hong Kong).
JMIR Aging. 2025 Jan 29;8:e60506. doi: 10.2196/60506.
Hospital discharge for older adult patients carries risks. Effective patient-provider communication is crucial for postacute care. Technology-based communication tools are promising in improving patient experience and outcomes. However, there is limited evidence comparing patient and provider user experiences on a large-scale basis, hindering the exploration of true patient-provider shared understanding.
This study aimed to evaluate an electronic health record-based discharge communication tool by examining and comparing patient and provider perspectives.
This study comprised a cross-sectional self-administered staff survey and a pre-post cross-sectional patient survey. Physicians, nurses, and older adult patients aged 65 years and older discharged from 4 public hospitals were included. Patient-provider comparison items focused on 3 aspects of the design quality of the tool (information clarity, adequacy, and usefulness) and overall satisfaction with the tool. In addition, patients' experience of discharge information and their medication-taking behaviors before and after the program implementation were compared based on a validated local patient experience survey instrument. Providers' perceived usefulness of this tool to their work and implementation intentions were measured based on the technology acceptance model to enhance understanding of their experiences by conducting structural equation modeling analysis.
A total of 1375 and 2353 valid responses were received from providers and patients, respectively. Patients' overall satisfaction with this communication tool is significantly higher than providers', and patients rated the information clarity and usefulness presented by this tool higher as well (P<.001). However, patients rated information adequacy significantly lower than providers (P<.001). Meanwhile, patients reported a significant improvement in their experience of discharge medication information, and fewer patients reported side effects encounters after the program implementation (126/1083, 11.6% vs 111/1235, 9%; P=.04). However, providers showed inconsistent implementation fidelity. Providers' perceived quality of the tool design (β coefficient=0.24, 95% CI 0.08-0.40) and perceived usefulness to their work (β coefficient=0.57, 95% CI 0.43-0.71) significantly impacted their satisfaction. Satisfaction can significantly impact implementation intentions (β coefficient=0.40, 95% CI 0.17-0.64), which further impacts implementation behaviors (β coefficient=0.16, 95% CI 0.10-0.23).
A notable disparity exists between patients and health care providers. This may hinder the achievement of the tool's benefits. Future research should aim for a comprehensive overview of implementation barriers and corresponding strategies to enhance staff performance and facilitate patient-provider shared understanding.
老年患者出院存在风险。有效的医患沟通对于急性后期护理至关重要。基于技术的沟通工具在改善患者体验和治疗结果方面颇具前景。然而,在大规模比较患者和医护人员用户体验方面的证据有限,这阻碍了对医患真正共同理解的探索。
本研究旨在通过检查和比较患者与医护人员的观点来评估一种基于电子健康记录的出院沟通工具。
本研究包括一项横断面自我管理的员工调查和一项前后横断面患者调查。纳入了从4家公立医院出院的65岁及以上的医生、护士和老年患者。医患比较项目聚焦于工具设计质量的3个方面(信息清晰度、充分性和有用性)以及对工具的总体满意度。此外,根据一份经过验证的当地患者体验调查问卷,比较了项目实施前后患者的出院信息体验及其用药行为。基于技术接受模型测量医护人员对该工具对其工作的有用性感知和实施意图,通过进行结构方程建模分析来增强对他们体验的理解。
分别从医护人员和患者那里收到了1375份和2353份有效回复。患者对这种沟通工具的总体满意度显著高于医护人员,并且患者对该工具呈现的信息清晰度和有用性的评分也更高(P<0.001)。然而,患者对信息充分性的评分显著低于医护人员(P<0.001)。同时,患者报告其出院用药信息体验有显著改善,并且项目实施后报告遇到副作用的患者更少(126/1083,11.6%对111/1235,9%;P=0.04)。然而,医护人员的实施保真度不一致。医护人员对工具设计质量的感知(β系数=0.24,95%CI 0.08 - 0.40)及其对工作的有用性感知(β系数=0.57,95%CI 0.43 - 0.71)显著影响他们的满意度。满意度可显著影响实施意图(β系数=0.40,95%CI 0.17 - 0.64),这进而影响实施行为(β系数=0.16,95%CI 0.10 - 0.23)。
患者和医疗保健提供者之间存在显著差异。这可能会阻碍该工具效益的实现。未来的研究应致力于全面概述实施障碍及相应策略,以提高员工绩效并促进医患共同理解。