Barriers and Enablers to Using a Patient-Facing Electronic Questionnaire: A Qualitative Theoretical Domains Framework Analysis

BackgroundElectronic patient questionnaires are becoming ubiquitous in health care. To address care gaps that contribute to poor asthma management, we developed the Electronic Asthma Management System, which includes a previsit electronic patient questionnaire linked to a com...

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Main Authors: Yamada, Janet, Kouri, Andrew, Simard, Sarah-Nicole, Segovia, Stephanie A, Gupta, Samir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-10-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:http://www.jmir.org/2020/10/e19474/
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spelling doaj-e38a0cb3b1204fc686f8c708595ed6952021-04-02T21:36:05ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712020-10-012210e1947410.2196/19474Barriers and Enablers to Using a Patient-Facing Electronic Questionnaire: A Qualitative Theoretical Domains Framework AnalysisYamada, JanetKouri, AndrewSimard, Sarah-NicoleSegovia, Stephanie AGupta, Samir BackgroundElectronic patient questionnaires are becoming ubiquitous in health care. To address care gaps that contribute to poor asthma management, we developed the Electronic Asthma Management System, which includes a previsit electronic patient questionnaire linked to a computerized clinical decision support system. ObjectiveThis study aims to identify the determinants (barriers and enablers) of patient uptake and completion of a previsit mobile health questionnaire. MethodsWe conducted semistructured interviews with adult patients with asthma in Toronto, Canada. After demonstrating the questionnaire, participants completed the questionnaire using their smartphones and were then interviewed regarding perceived barriers and enablers to using and completing the questionnaire. Interview questions were based on the Theoretical Domains Framework to identify the determinants of health-related behavior. We generated themes that addressed the enablers and barriers to the uptake and completion of the questionnaire. ResultsIn total, 12 participants were interviewed for saturation. Key enablers were as follows: the questionnaire was easy to complete without additional knowledge or skills and was perceived as a priority and responsibility for patients, use could lead to more efficient and personalized care, completion on one’s own time would be convenient, and uptake and completion could be optimized through patient reminders. Concerns about data security, the usefulness of questionnaire data, the stress of completing it accurately and on time, competing priorities, and preferences to complete the questionnaire on other devices were the main barriers. ConclusionsThe barriers and enablers identified by patients should be addressed by developing implementation strategies to enhance e-questionnaire use and completion by patients. As the use of e-questionnaires grows, our findings will contribute to implementation efforts across settings and diseases.http://www.jmir.org/2020/10/e19474/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yamada, Janet
Kouri, Andrew
Simard, Sarah-Nicole
Segovia, Stephanie A
Gupta, Samir
spellingShingle Yamada, Janet
Kouri, Andrew
Simard, Sarah-Nicole
Segovia, Stephanie A
Gupta, Samir
Barriers and Enablers to Using a Patient-Facing Electronic Questionnaire: A Qualitative Theoretical Domains Framework Analysis
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Yamada, Janet
Kouri, Andrew
Simard, Sarah-Nicole
Segovia, Stephanie A
Gupta, Samir
author_sort Yamada, Janet
title Barriers and Enablers to Using a Patient-Facing Electronic Questionnaire: A Qualitative Theoretical Domains Framework Analysis
title_short Barriers and Enablers to Using a Patient-Facing Electronic Questionnaire: A Qualitative Theoretical Domains Framework Analysis
title_full Barriers and Enablers to Using a Patient-Facing Electronic Questionnaire: A Qualitative Theoretical Domains Framework Analysis
title_fullStr Barriers and Enablers to Using a Patient-Facing Electronic Questionnaire: A Qualitative Theoretical Domains Framework Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Barriers and Enablers to Using a Patient-Facing Electronic Questionnaire: A Qualitative Theoretical Domains Framework Analysis
title_sort barriers and enablers to using a patient-facing electronic questionnaire: a qualitative theoretical domains framework analysis
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2020-10-01
description BackgroundElectronic patient questionnaires are becoming ubiquitous in health care. To address care gaps that contribute to poor asthma management, we developed the Electronic Asthma Management System, which includes a previsit electronic patient questionnaire linked to a computerized clinical decision support system. ObjectiveThis study aims to identify the determinants (barriers and enablers) of patient uptake and completion of a previsit mobile health questionnaire. MethodsWe conducted semistructured interviews with adult patients with asthma in Toronto, Canada. After demonstrating the questionnaire, participants completed the questionnaire using their smartphones and were then interviewed regarding perceived barriers and enablers to using and completing the questionnaire. Interview questions were based on the Theoretical Domains Framework to identify the determinants of health-related behavior. We generated themes that addressed the enablers and barriers to the uptake and completion of the questionnaire. ResultsIn total, 12 participants were interviewed for saturation. Key enablers were as follows: the questionnaire was easy to complete without additional knowledge or skills and was perceived as a priority and responsibility for patients, use could lead to more efficient and personalized care, completion on one’s own time would be convenient, and uptake and completion could be optimized through patient reminders. Concerns about data security, the usefulness of questionnaire data, the stress of completing it accurately and on time, competing priorities, and preferences to complete the questionnaire on other devices were the main barriers. ConclusionsThe barriers and enablers identified by patients should be addressed by developing implementation strategies to enhance e-questionnaire use and completion by patients. As the use of e-questionnaires grows, our findings will contribute to implementation efforts across settings and diseases.
url http://www.jmir.org/2020/10/e19474/
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