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Patient Centeredness in Electronic Communication: Evaluation of Patient-to-Health Care Team Secure Messaging

BACKGROUND: As information and communication technology is becoming more widely implemented across health care organizations, patient-provider email or asynchronous electronic secure messaging has the potential to support patient-centered communication. Within the medical home model of the Veterans...

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Autores principales: Hogan, Timothy P, Luger, Tana M, Volkman, Julie E, Rocheleau, Mary, Mueller, Nora, Barker, Anna M, Nazi, Kim M, Houston, Thomas K, Bokhour, Barbara G
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5864998/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29519774
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.8801
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author Hogan, Timothy P
Luger, Tana M
Volkman, Julie E
Rocheleau, Mary
Mueller, Nora
Barker, Anna M
Nazi, Kim M
Houston, Thomas K
Bokhour, Barbara G
author_facet Hogan, Timothy P
Luger, Tana M
Volkman, Julie E
Rocheleau, Mary
Mueller, Nora
Barker, Anna M
Nazi, Kim M
Houston, Thomas K
Bokhour, Barbara G
author_sort Hogan, Timothy P
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: As information and communication technology is becoming more widely implemented across health care organizations, patient-provider email or asynchronous electronic secure messaging has the potential to support patient-centered communication. Within the medical home model of the Veterans Health Administration (VA), secure messaging is envisioned as a means to enhance access and strengthen the relationships between veterans and their health care team members. However, despite previous studies that have examined the content of electronic messages exchanged between patients and health care providers, less research has focused on the socioemotional aspects of the communication enacted through those messages. OBJECTIVE: Recognizing the potential of secure messaging to facilitate the goals of patient-centered care, the objectives of this analysis were to not only understand why patients and health care team members exchange secure messages but also to examine the socioemotional tone engendered in these messages. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional coding evaluation of a corpus of secure messages exchanged between patients and health care team members over 6 months at 8 VA facilities. We identified patients whose medical records showed secure messaging threads containing at least 2 messages and compiled a random sample of these threads. Drawing on previous literature regarding the analysis of asynchronous, patient-provider electronic communication, we developed a coding scheme comprising a series of a priori patient and health care team member codes. Three team members tested the scheme on a subset of the messages and then independently coded the sample of messaging threads. RESULTS: Of the 711 messages coded from the 384 messaging threads, 52.5% (373/711) were sent by patients and 47.5% (338/711) by health care team members. Patient and health care team member messages included logistical content (82.6%, 308/373 vs 89.1%, 301/338), were neutral in tone (70.2%, 262/373 vs 82.0%, 277/338), and respectful in nature (25.7%, 96/373 vs 33.4%, 113/338). Secure messages from health care team members sometimes appeared hurried (25.4%, 86/338) but also displayed friendliness or warmth (18.9%, 64/338) and reassurance or encouragement (18.6%, 63/338). Most patient messages involved either providing or seeking information; however, the majority of health care team member messages involved information provision in response to patient questions. CONCLUSIONS: This evaluation is an important step toward understanding the content and socioemotional tone that is part of the secure messaging exchanges between patients and health care team members. Our findings were encouraging; however, there are opportunities for improvement. As health care organizations seek to supplement traditional encounters with virtual care, they must reexamine their use of secure messaging, including the patient centeredness of the communication, and the potential for more proactive use by health care team members.
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spelling pubmed-58649982018-03-26 Patient Centeredness in Electronic Communication: Evaluation of Patient-to-Health Care Team Secure Messaging Hogan, Timothy P Luger, Tana M Volkman, Julie E Rocheleau, Mary Mueller, Nora Barker, Anna M Nazi, Kim M Houston, Thomas K Bokhour, Barbara G J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: As information and communication technology is becoming more widely implemented across health care organizations, patient-provider email or asynchronous electronic secure messaging has the potential to support patient-centered communication. Within the medical home model of the Veterans Health Administration (VA), secure messaging is envisioned as a means to enhance access and strengthen the relationships between veterans and their health care team members. However, despite previous studies that have examined the content of electronic messages exchanged between patients and health care providers, less research has focused on the socioemotional aspects of the communication enacted through those messages. OBJECTIVE: Recognizing the potential of secure messaging to facilitate the goals of patient-centered care, the objectives of this analysis were to not only understand why patients and health care team members exchange secure messages but also to examine the socioemotional tone engendered in these messages. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional coding evaluation of a corpus of secure messages exchanged between patients and health care team members over 6 months at 8 VA facilities. We identified patients whose medical records showed secure messaging threads containing at least 2 messages and compiled a random sample of these threads. Drawing on previous literature regarding the analysis of asynchronous, patient-provider electronic communication, we developed a coding scheme comprising a series of a priori patient and health care team member codes. Three team members tested the scheme on a subset of the messages and then independently coded the sample of messaging threads. RESULTS: Of the 711 messages coded from the 384 messaging threads, 52.5% (373/711) were sent by patients and 47.5% (338/711) by health care team members. Patient and health care team member messages included logistical content (82.6%, 308/373 vs 89.1%, 301/338), were neutral in tone (70.2%, 262/373 vs 82.0%, 277/338), and respectful in nature (25.7%, 96/373 vs 33.4%, 113/338). Secure messages from health care team members sometimes appeared hurried (25.4%, 86/338) but also displayed friendliness or warmth (18.9%, 64/338) and reassurance or encouragement (18.6%, 63/338). Most patient messages involved either providing or seeking information; however, the majority of health care team member messages involved information provision in response to patient questions. CONCLUSIONS: This evaluation is an important step toward understanding the content and socioemotional tone that is part of the secure messaging exchanges between patients and health care team members. Our findings were encouraging; however, there are opportunities for improvement. As health care organizations seek to supplement traditional encounters with virtual care, they must reexamine their use of secure messaging, including the patient centeredness of the communication, and the potential for more proactive use by health care team members. JMIR Publications 2018-03-08 /pmc/articles/PMC5864998/ /pubmed/29519774 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.8801 Text en ©Timothy P Hogan, Tana M Luger, Julie E Volkman, Mary Rocheleau, Nora Mueller, Anna M Barker, Kim M Nazi, Thomas K Houston, Barbara G Bokhour. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 08.03.2018. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), 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
Hogan, Timothy P
Luger, Tana M
Volkman, Julie E
Rocheleau, Mary
Mueller, Nora
Barker, Anna M
Nazi, Kim M
Houston, Thomas K
Bokhour, Barbara G
Patient Centeredness in Electronic Communication: Evaluation of Patient-to-Health Care Team Secure Messaging
title Patient Centeredness in Electronic Communication: Evaluation of Patient-to-Health Care Team Secure Messaging
title_full Patient Centeredness in Electronic Communication: Evaluation of Patient-to-Health Care Team Secure Messaging
title_fullStr Patient Centeredness in Electronic Communication: Evaluation of Patient-to-Health Care Team Secure Messaging
title_full_unstemmed Patient Centeredness in Electronic Communication: Evaluation of Patient-to-Health Care Team Secure Messaging
title_short Patient Centeredness in Electronic Communication: Evaluation of Patient-to-Health Care Team Secure Messaging
title_sort patient centeredness in electronic communication: evaluation of patient-to-health care team secure messaging
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5864998/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29519774
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.8801
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