To Use or Not to Use – Practitioners’ Perceptions of an Open Web Portal for Young Patients With Diabetes

BackgroundHealth care professionals' attitudes can be a significant factor in their acceptance and efficient use of information technology, so they need to have more knowledge about this resource to enhance their participation. ObjectiveWe explored practition...

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Main Authors: Nordfeldt, Sam, Ängarne-Lindberg, Teresia, Berterö, Carina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2012-11-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:http://www.jmir.org/2012/6/e154/
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spelling doaj-96e18bd1537747039a0107a63b1b8e102021-04-02T21:36:10ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712012-11-01146e15410.2196/jmir.1987To Use or Not to Use – Practitioners’ Perceptions of an Open Web Portal for Young Patients With DiabetesNordfeldt, SamÄngarne-Lindberg, TeresiaBerterö, Carina BackgroundHealth care professionals' attitudes can be a significant factor in their acceptance and efficient use of information technology, so they need to have more knowledge about this resource to enhance their participation. ObjectiveWe explored practitioners’ perceptions of using an open-access interactive Web portal tailored to young diabetes type 1 patients and their guardians or significant others. The portal offered discussion forums, blog tools, self-care and treatment information, research updates, and news from local practitioners. MethodsEighteen professionals who were on pediatric diabetes care teams each wrote an essay on their experience using the portal. For their essays, they were asked to describe two situations, focusing on positive and negative user experiences. The essays were analyzed using qualitative content analysis. ResultsBased on our analysis of the respondents essays, we identified three categories that describe perceptions of the Web portal. The first category - to use or not to use - included the different perspectives of the practioners; those who questioned the benefits of using the Web portal or showed some resistance to using it. The frequency of use among the practitioners varied greatly. Some practitioners never used it, while others used it on a daily basis and regularly promoted it to their patients. Some respondents in this category reflected on the benefits of contributing actively to online dialogues. In the second category - information center for everyone – practitioners embraced the site as a resource for scientifically sound information and advice. As part of their practice, and as a complement to traditional care, practitioners in this category described sending information through the portal to patients and their significant others. Practitioners felt safe recommending the site because they knew that the information provided was generated by other practitioners. They also assumed that their patients benefited from actively using the Web portal at home: peers brought the site to life by exchanging experiences through the discussion forums. In the third category – developing our practice – practitioners reflected upon the types of information that should be given to patients and how to give it (ie, during in-person appointments or through the Web portal). They perceived meeting with various professionals at other hospitals to update information on the portal and develop content policies as constructive teamwork. Practitioners expressed interest in reading patients’ dialogues online to learn more about their views. They also thought about how they could use the portal to adapt more to patients’ needs (eg, creating functions so patients could chat with the diabetes nurses and doctors). ConclusionsPractitioners expressed positive perceptions toward a tailored open Web portal. They suggested that future benefits could be derived from systems that integrate factual information and online dialogues between practitioners and patients (ie, exchanging information for everyone’s benefit).http://www.jmir.org/2012/6/e154/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nordfeldt, Sam
Ängarne-Lindberg, Teresia
Berterö, Carina
spellingShingle Nordfeldt, Sam
Ängarne-Lindberg, Teresia
Berterö, Carina
To Use or Not to Use – Practitioners’ Perceptions of an Open Web Portal for Young Patients With Diabetes
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Nordfeldt, Sam
Ängarne-Lindberg, Teresia
Berterö, Carina
author_sort Nordfeldt, Sam
title To Use or Not to Use – Practitioners’ Perceptions of an Open Web Portal for Young Patients With Diabetes
title_short To Use or Not to Use – Practitioners’ Perceptions of an Open Web Portal for Young Patients With Diabetes
title_full To Use or Not to Use – Practitioners’ Perceptions of an Open Web Portal for Young Patients With Diabetes
title_fullStr To Use or Not to Use – Practitioners’ Perceptions of an Open Web Portal for Young Patients With Diabetes
title_full_unstemmed To Use or Not to Use – Practitioners’ Perceptions of an Open Web Portal for Young Patients With Diabetes
title_sort to use or not to use – practitioners’ perceptions of an open web portal for young patients with diabetes
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2012-11-01
description BackgroundHealth care professionals' attitudes can be a significant factor in their acceptance and efficient use of information technology, so they need to have more knowledge about this resource to enhance their participation. ObjectiveWe explored practitioners’ perceptions of using an open-access interactive Web portal tailored to young diabetes type 1 patients and their guardians or significant others. The portal offered discussion forums, blog tools, self-care and treatment information, research updates, and news from local practitioners. MethodsEighteen professionals who were on pediatric diabetes care teams each wrote an essay on their experience using the portal. For their essays, they were asked to describe two situations, focusing on positive and negative user experiences. The essays were analyzed using qualitative content analysis. ResultsBased on our analysis of the respondents essays, we identified three categories that describe perceptions of the Web portal. The first category - to use or not to use - included the different perspectives of the practioners; those who questioned the benefits of using the Web portal or showed some resistance to using it. The frequency of use among the practitioners varied greatly. Some practitioners never used it, while others used it on a daily basis and regularly promoted it to their patients. Some respondents in this category reflected on the benefits of contributing actively to online dialogues. In the second category - information center for everyone – practitioners embraced the site as a resource for scientifically sound information and advice. As part of their practice, and as a complement to traditional care, practitioners in this category described sending information through the portal to patients and their significant others. Practitioners felt safe recommending the site because they knew that the information provided was generated by other practitioners. They also assumed that their patients benefited from actively using the Web portal at home: peers brought the site to life by exchanging experiences through the discussion forums. In the third category – developing our practice – practitioners reflected upon the types of information that should be given to patients and how to give it (ie, during in-person appointments or through the Web portal). They perceived meeting with various professionals at other hospitals to update information on the portal and develop content policies as constructive teamwork. Practitioners expressed interest in reading patients’ dialogues online to learn more about their views. They also thought about how they could use the portal to adapt more to patients’ needs (eg, creating functions so patients could chat with the diabetes nurses and doctors). ConclusionsPractitioners expressed positive perceptions toward a tailored open Web portal. They suggested that future benefits could be derived from systems that integrate factual information and online dialogues between practitioners and patients (ie, exchanging information for everyone’s benefit).
url http://www.jmir.org/2012/6/e154/
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