Harman Hayley, Pona Ashleigh A, Tabone Lawrence, Abunnaja Salim, Szoka Nova, Cox Stephanie
Department of Surgery, West Virginia University School of Medicine, Morgantown, West Virginia, USA. (Drs. Harman, Tabone, Abunnaja, and Szoka).
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health, Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus, Ohio, USA. (Dr. Pona).
JSLS. 2025 Jul-Sep;29(3). doi: 10.4293/JSLS.2025.00068. Epub 2025 Sep 3.
Electronic data capture may enhance efficiency and patient engagement in preoperative psychosocial evaluations for metabolic and bariatric surgery yet concerns persist about its feasibility in rural populations with historically lower mobile health adoption. This study evaluated the feasibility and acceptability of electronic patient-reported outcomes among metabolic and bariatric surgery patients in a rural setting.
In this quality improvement project, 202 patients undergoing presurgical psychosocial evaluation at an academic medical center in rural West Virginia completed a battery of psychological assessments on a clinic-provided tablet. Patients also completed a 9-item questionnaire assessing satisfaction, usability, and perceived impact on provider communication.
Most patients reported high satisfaction with the tablet-based format (85%), and nearly all (96%) preferred it over paper-and-pencil forms. Usability ratings were strong, with the majority describing the tablet as "very easy" to read (86%), use (84%), and navigate (87%). Notably, 42% reported the tablet encouraged them to discuss eating or mental health concerns with their provider, and 49% indicated it helped them remember prior symptoms. Only 4% preferred paper-and-pencil assessments, and these patients were significantly older.
Tablet-based electronic patient-reported outcomes collection is a feasible and well-accepted method for presurgical psychosocial evaluations in rural metabolic and bariatric surgery patients. These findings challenge assumptions about digital hesitancy in rural populations and support broader implementation of electronic data capture in bariatric care workflows.
电子数据采集可能会提高代谢和减重手术术前心理社会评估的效率以及患者参与度,但对于在移动医疗采用率历来较低的农村人口中其可行性仍存在担忧。本研究评估了农村地区代谢和减重手术患者中电子患者报告结局的可行性和可接受性。
在这个质量改进项目中,202名在西弗吉尼亚州农村的一家学术医疗中心接受术前心理社会评估的患者,在诊所提供的平板电脑上完成了一系列心理评估。患者还完成了一份9项问卷,评估满意度、可用性以及对医患沟通的感知影响。
大多数患者对基于平板电脑的形式表示高度满意(85%),几乎所有患者(96%)都更喜欢这种形式而非纸笔形式。可用性评分很高,大多数人将平板电脑描述为阅读(86%)、使用(84%)和操作(87%)“非常容易”。值得注意的是,42%的患者表示平板电脑促使他们与医生讨论饮食或心理健康问题,49%的患者表示它帮助他们记住了之前的症状。只有4%的患者更喜欢纸笔评估,且这些患者年龄明显更大。
基于平板电脑的电子患者报告结局收集是农村地区代谢和减重手术患者术前心理社会评估的一种可行且广受欢迎的方法。这些发现挑战了关于农村人口数字迟疑的假设,并支持在减重护理工作流程中更广泛地实施电子数据采集。