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Adoption of a Portal for the Primary Care Management of Pediatric Asthma: A Mixed-Methods Implementation Study

BACKGROUND: Patient portals may improve communication between families of children with asthma and their primary care providers and improve outcomes. However, the feasibility of using portals to collect patient-reported outcomes from families and the barriers and facilitators of portal implementatio...

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Autores principales: Fiks, Alexander G, DuRivage, Nathalie, Mayne, Stephanie L, Finch, Stacia, Ross, Michelle E, Giacomini, Kelli, Suh, Andrew, McCarn, Banita, Brandt, Elias, Karavite, Dean, Staton, Elizabeth W, Shone, Laura P, McGoldrick, Valerie, Noonan, Kathleen, Miller, Dorothy, Lehmann, Christoph U, Pace, Wilson D, Grundmeier, Robert W
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4945817/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27357835
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.5610
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author Fiks, Alexander G
DuRivage, Nathalie
Mayne, Stephanie L
Finch, Stacia
Ross, Michelle E
Giacomini, Kelli
Suh, Andrew
McCarn, Banita
Brandt, Elias
Karavite, Dean
Staton, Elizabeth W
Shone, Laura P
McGoldrick, Valerie
Noonan, Kathleen
Miller, Dorothy
Lehmann, Christoph U
Pace, Wilson D
Grundmeier, Robert W
author_facet Fiks, Alexander G
DuRivage, Nathalie
Mayne, Stephanie L
Finch, Stacia
Ross, Michelle E
Giacomini, Kelli
Suh, Andrew
McCarn, Banita
Brandt, Elias
Karavite, Dean
Staton, Elizabeth W
Shone, Laura P
McGoldrick, Valerie
Noonan, Kathleen
Miller, Dorothy
Lehmann, Christoph U
Pace, Wilson D
Grundmeier, Robert W
author_sort Fiks, Alexander G
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Patient portals may improve communication between families of children with asthma and their primary care providers and improve outcomes. However, the feasibility of using portals to collect patient-reported outcomes from families and the barriers and facilitators of portal implementation across diverse pediatric primary care settings have not been established. OBJECTIVE: We evaluated the feasibility of using a patient portal for pediatric asthma in primary care, its impact on management, and barriers and facilitators of implementation success. METHODS: We conducted a mixed-methods implementation study in 20 practices (11 states). Using the portal, parents of children with asthma aged 6-12 years completed monthly surveys to communicate treatment concerns, treatment goals, symptom control, medication use, and side effects. We used logistic regression to evaluate the association of portal use with child characteristics and changes to asthma management. Ten clinician focus groups and 22 semistructured parent interviews explored barriers and facilitators of use in the context of an evidence-based implementation framework. RESULTS: We invited 9133 families to enroll and 237 (2.59%) used the portal (range by practice, 0.6%-13.6%). Children of parents or guardians who used the portal were significantly more likely than nonusers to be aged 6-9 years (vs 10-12, P=.02), have mild or moderate/severe persistent asthma (P=.009 and P=.04), have a prescription of a controller medication (P<.001), and have private insurance (P=.002). Portal users with uncontrolled asthma had significantly more medication changes and primary care asthma visits after using the portal relative to the year earlier (increases of 14% and 16%, respectively). Qualitative results revealed the importance of practice organization (coordinated workflows) as well as family (asthma severity) and innovation (facilitated communication and ease of use) characteristics for implementation success. CONCLUSIONS: Although use was associated with higher treatment engagement, our results suggest that achieving widespread portal adoption is unlikely in the short term. Implementation efforts should include workflow redesign and prioritize enrollment of symptomatic children. CLINICALTRIAL: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01966068; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01966068 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6i9iSQkm3)
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spelling pubmed-49458172016-08-03 Adoption of a Portal for the Primary Care Management of Pediatric Asthma: A Mixed-Methods Implementation Study Fiks, Alexander G DuRivage, Nathalie Mayne, Stephanie L Finch, Stacia Ross, Michelle E Giacomini, Kelli Suh, Andrew McCarn, Banita Brandt, Elias Karavite, Dean Staton, Elizabeth W Shone, Laura P McGoldrick, Valerie Noonan, Kathleen Miller, Dorothy Lehmann, Christoph U Pace, Wilson D Grundmeier, Robert W J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Patient portals may improve communication between families of children with asthma and their primary care providers and improve outcomes. However, the feasibility of using portals to collect patient-reported outcomes from families and the barriers and facilitators of portal implementation across diverse pediatric primary care settings have not been established. OBJECTIVE: We evaluated the feasibility of using a patient portal for pediatric asthma in primary care, its impact on management, and barriers and facilitators of implementation success. METHODS: We conducted a mixed-methods implementation study in 20 practices (11 states). Using the portal, parents of children with asthma aged 6-12 years completed monthly surveys to communicate treatment concerns, treatment goals, symptom control, medication use, and side effects. We used logistic regression to evaluate the association of portal use with child characteristics and changes to asthma management. Ten clinician focus groups and 22 semistructured parent interviews explored barriers and facilitators of use in the context of an evidence-based implementation framework. RESULTS: We invited 9133 families to enroll and 237 (2.59%) used the portal (range by practice, 0.6%-13.6%). Children of parents or guardians who used the portal were significantly more likely than nonusers to be aged 6-9 years (vs 10-12, P=.02), have mild or moderate/severe persistent asthma (P=.009 and P=.04), have a prescription of a controller medication (P<.001), and have private insurance (P=.002). Portal users with uncontrolled asthma had significantly more medication changes and primary care asthma visits after using the portal relative to the year earlier (increases of 14% and 16%, respectively). Qualitative results revealed the importance of practice organization (coordinated workflows) as well as family (asthma severity) and innovation (facilitated communication and ease of use) characteristics for implementation success. CONCLUSIONS: Although use was associated with higher treatment engagement, our results suggest that achieving widespread portal adoption is unlikely in the short term. Implementation efforts should include workflow redesign and prioritize enrollment of symptomatic children. CLINICALTRIAL: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01966068; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01966068 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6i9iSQkm3) JMIR Publications 2016-06-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4945817/ /pubmed/27357835 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.5610 Text en ©Alexander G. Fiks, Nathalie DuRivage, Stephanie L. Mayne, Stacia Finch, Michelle E. Ross, Kelli Giacomini, Andrew Suh, Banita McCarn, Elias Brandt, Dean Karavite, Elizabeth W. Staton, Laura P. Shone, Valerie McGoldrick, Kathleen Noonan, Dorothy Miller, Christoph U. Lehmann, Wilson D. Pace, Robert W. Grundmeier. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 29.06.2016. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Fiks, Alexander G
DuRivage, Nathalie
Mayne, Stephanie L
Finch, Stacia
Ross, Michelle E
Giacomini, Kelli
Suh, Andrew
McCarn, Banita
Brandt, Elias
Karavite, Dean
Staton, Elizabeth W
Shone, Laura P
McGoldrick, Valerie
Noonan, Kathleen
Miller, Dorothy
Lehmann, Christoph U
Pace, Wilson D
Grundmeier, Robert W
Adoption of a Portal for the Primary Care Management of Pediatric Asthma: A Mixed-Methods Implementation Study
title Adoption of a Portal for the Primary Care Management of Pediatric Asthma: A Mixed-Methods Implementation Study
title_full Adoption of a Portal for the Primary Care Management of Pediatric Asthma: A Mixed-Methods Implementation Study
title_fullStr Adoption of a Portal for the Primary Care Management of Pediatric Asthma: A Mixed-Methods Implementation Study
title_full_unstemmed Adoption of a Portal for the Primary Care Management of Pediatric Asthma: A Mixed-Methods Implementation Study
title_short Adoption of a Portal for the Primary Care Management of Pediatric Asthma: A Mixed-Methods Implementation Study
title_sort adoption of a portal for the primary care management of pediatric asthma: a mixed-methods implementation study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4945817/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27357835
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.5610
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