Inpatient Clinical Trial
Official title:
Addressing Hospital Patient Information Needs Using a Personal Health Record Portal
The aim of this study is to evaluate the impact of an inpatient personal health record (PHR) portal intervention within the hospital environment. The intervention hopes to improve patient engagement with their care and to measure patient activation and satisfaction. Additional clinical measure (e.g. number of adverse events that occur during the stay, changes to medication orders, etc.) will also be studied. Characterization of hospital patient and clinician attitudes towards patient engagement will also be formalized.
This study will utilize an enhanced inpatient PHR portal to allow patients to view their care
team, documented allergies and medications (home and hospital) as well as electronically
document questions and concerns related to their care. These questions and concerns are
visible to members of the patients' care teams within our commercial inpatient electronic
health record (EHR). We will study the impact of the technology using a randomized trial of
426 cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery patients at Columbia University Medical Center in
Upper Manhattan. We hypothesize that the use of the inpatient PHR portal will identify and
address patients' information needs, improve patient activation, engagement and satisfaction,
and encourage PHR use after hospital discharge. We also hypothesize that information entered
by patients into the PHR portal will be useful to clinicians. There is no compensation for
participating in this study.
The specific aims of the proposal are to:
Aim 1: Evaluate the impact of an inpatient PHR portal intervention using a randomized
controlled trial. The primary outcomes will be patient activation, engagement and
satisfaction. We will also determine whether access to the inpatient PHR portal is correlated
with greater use of the PHR after hospital discharge.
Aim 2: Characterize information needs of hospital patients and assess clinicians' attitudes
toward patient engagement in the hospital setting. We will analyze the questions and comments
that patients record within the PHR portal application and assess the salience of
patient-entered information to issues of care quality and safety. This aim will expand our
previous work in taxonomy development and hazard and near-miss recognition. A survey will be
administered to collect clinicians' perceptions of the barriers to and facilitators of system
use. EHR documentation will be reviewed to assess whether patient-entered information was
acknowledged by clinicians, and whether changes were made to the patient's plan of care as a
result.
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