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Patients
reveal willingness to trade Hands-On Medical
Care for Computer Consultations
Newswise — As President Barack Obama calls
for streamlining heath care by fully
converting to electronic medical records and
as Congress prepares to debate issues of
patient privacy, one question has largely
gone unasked: What do patients want?
A qualitative study led by a research team
at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC)
helps answer that question.
Reported in the June 2009 issue of the
Journal of General Internal Medicine (JGIM),
the findings provide key insights into
consumer preferences, suggesting that
patients want full access to all of their
medical records, are willing to make some
privacy concessions in the interest of
making their medical records completely
transparent, and that, going forward, fully
expect that computers will play a major role
in their medical care, even substituting for
face-to-face doctor visits.
“We set out to study patient attitudes
toward electronic personal health records
and other emerging and future electronic
health information technologies,” explains
the study’s lead author Jan Walker, RN, MBA,
Instructor in Medicine in the Division of
General Medicine and Primary Care at BIDMC
and Harvard Medical School.
“And we learned that, for the most part,
patients are very comfortable with the idea
of computers playing a central role in their
care.”
In fact, she adds, patients said they not
only want computers to bring them customized
medical information, they fully expect that
in the future they will be able to rely on
electronic technology for many routine
medical issues.
“Patients know how busy their doctors are
and they want to reserve us for what they
really need us for – treating serious
illness and conditions,” adds senior author
Tom Delbanco, MD, the Richard and Florence
Koplow-James Tullis Professor of General
Medicine and Primary Care at Harvard Medical
School and BIDMC.
“They may be more than happy to rely on
computer protocols and ‘faceless doctors’ to
help them manage garden-variety medical
problems.”
Focus groups were held in four cities:
Boston, MA; Portland, ME; Tampa, FL; and
Denver, CO. The locations were selected to
represent various geographic areas, to
include both rural and urban populations and
to incorporate ethnic and cultural
diversity.
Six of the eight groups (consisting of nine
to 12 participants each) were made up of
consumers.
The last two groups were made up of health
care professionals from Boston and Denver,
assembled to provide their perspectives on
the role of health information technology
and to compare their opinions with those of
consumers.
In each case, participants were asked how
they currently organize the information they
need to manage their health and medical
care, and explored how they would ideally
like to manage and use this information,
including how technologies could address any
gaps.
“The discussions showed that, for the most
part, consumers want computers to take into
account their personal profiles in order to
bring them customized information and
advice,” explains Walker.
“They also expect that technologies will
‘watch’ over them, monitoring their health
and giving them real-time feedback,
including communicating with clinicians when
needed.
Participants
also said they expect computers to act as
‘personal coaches,’ and to foster self
care.”
Strikingly, she adds, privacy of health care
information was of less importance to the
groups than might be expected.
“It seems that as the population ages and
finds itself facing more illness and serious
medical conditions, privacy of health
information becomes much less important to
patients than it is when they are healthy,”
she notes.
“Patients are willing to trade some privacy
in order to have records fully available in
emergency settings and available to new
caregivers as well as to multiple
clinicians.”
New health technologies offer patients
online access to parts of electronic medical
records (EMRs), options for maintaining
their personal histories, and support for
day-to-day management of chronic illness,
the authors note.
But when it comes to the future design and
utility of these and other elements of care,
teams of software engineers, graphic artists
and clinicians rarely solicit patient
perspectives.
“The patient’s view is critical,” adds
Delbanco. “We health care professionals
think we know what it is, but we’re often
too arrogant to ask.
"
We want our healthcare system to be as
patient-centered as possible, and patients
have broad and deep experience with
technology in other sectors of their lives.”
Adds Stephen Downs, assistant vice president
of the health group at the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation which supported this
research through a grant from its Pioneer
Portfolio, “Year after year, people have
seen information technology transform one
industry after another and, more to the
point, transform their everyday experiences.
"This
is the age of the iPhone, Facebook and
Google Maps, yet health care feels very much
the same.
"This
study suggests that people are ready for
change – they want a modern health care
experience.” The Pioneer Portfolio supports
innovative ideas that may lead to
significant breakthroughs in the future of
health and health care.
Study coauthors include David K. Ahern, PhD,
of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard
Medical School and Lan Le, MPH, of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center is a
patient care, teaching and research
affiliate of Harvard Medical School and
consistently ranks in the top four in
National Institutes of Health funding among
independent hospitals nationwide.
BIDMC is a clinical partner of the Joslin
Diabetes Center and a research partner of
the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center. BIDMC
is the official hospital of the Boston Red
Sox. For more information, visit
www.bidmc.org.
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