A case study of stakeholder perceptions of patient held records: the Patients Know Best (PKB) solution

Introduction Patients Know Best (PKB) provides a patient portal with integrated, patient-controlled digital care records. Patient-controlled personal health records facilitate coordinated management of chronic disease through improved communications among, and about, patients across professional and...

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Main Authors: Elaine Bidmead, Alison Marshall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-09-01
Series:Digital Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2055207616668431
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spelling doaj-ceb2c8355944439784747f932c72191a2020-11-25T03:52:03ZengSAGE PublishingDigital Health2055-20762016-09-01210.1177/2055207616668431A case study of stakeholder perceptions of patient held records: the Patients Know Best (PKB) solutionElaine Bidmead0Alison Marshall1Cumbrian Centre for Health Technologies (CaCHeT), University of Cumbria, Carlisle, UKCumbrian Centre for Health Technologies (CaCHeT), University of Cumbria, Lancaster, UKIntroduction Patients Know Best (PKB) provides a patient portal with integrated, patient-controlled digital care records. Patient-controlled personal health records facilitate coordinated management of chronic disease through improved communications among, and about, patients across professional and organisational boundaries. An NHS foundation trust hospital has used PKB to support self-management in patients with inflammatory bowel disease; this paper presents a case study of usage. Methods The stakeholder empowered adoption model provided a framework for consulting variously placed stakeholders. Qualitative interviews with clinical stakeholders and a patient survey. Results Clinicians reported PKB to have enabled a new way of managing stable patients, this facilitated clinical and cost effective use of specialist nurses; improved two-way communications, and more optimal use of outpatient appointments and consultant time. The portal also facilitated a single, rationalised pathway for stable patients, enabling access to information and pro-active support. For patients, the system was a source of support when unwell and facilitated improved communication with specialists. Three main barriers to adoption were identified; these related to concerns over security, risk averse attitudes of users and problems with data integration. Conclusions Patient-controlled personal health records offer significant potential in supporting self-management. Digital connection to healthcare can help patients to understand their condition better and access appropriate, timely clinical advice.https://doi.org/10.1177/2055207616668431
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elaine Bidmead
Alison Marshall
spellingShingle Elaine Bidmead
Alison Marshall
A case study of stakeholder perceptions of patient held records: the Patients Know Best (PKB) solution
Digital Health
author_facet Elaine Bidmead
Alison Marshall
author_sort Elaine Bidmead
title A case study of stakeholder perceptions of patient held records: the Patients Know Best (PKB) solution
title_short A case study of stakeholder perceptions of patient held records: the Patients Know Best (PKB) solution
title_full A case study of stakeholder perceptions of patient held records: the Patients Know Best (PKB) solution
title_fullStr A case study of stakeholder perceptions of patient held records: the Patients Know Best (PKB) solution
title_full_unstemmed A case study of stakeholder perceptions of patient held records: the Patients Know Best (PKB) solution
title_sort case study of stakeholder perceptions of patient held records: the patients know best (pkb) solution
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Digital Health
issn 2055-2076
publishDate 2016-09-01
description Introduction Patients Know Best (PKB) provides a patient portal with integrated, patient-controlled digital care records. Patient-controlled personal health records facilitate coordinated management of chronic disease through improved communications among, and about, patients across professional and organisational boundaries. An NHS foundation trust hospital has used PKB to support self-management in patients with inflammatory bowel disease; this paper presents a case study of usage. Methods The stakeholder empowered adoption model provided a framework for consulting variously placed stakeholders. Qualitative interviews with clinical stakeholders and a patient survey. Results Clinicians reported PKB to have enabled a new way of managing stable patients, this facilitated clinical and cost effective use of specialist nurses; improved two-way communications, and more optimal use of outpatient appointments and consultant time. The portal also facilitated a single, rationalised pathway for stable patients, enabling access to information and pro-active support. For patients, the system was a source of support when unwell and facilitated improved communication with specialists. Three main barriers to adoption were identified; these related to concerns over security, risk averse attitudes of users and problems with data integration. Conclusions Patient-controlled personal health records offer significant potential in supporting self-management. Digital connection to healthcare can help patients to understand their condition better and access appropriate, timely clinical advice.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2055207616668431
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