Health Portal Functionality and the Use of Patient-Centered Technology

Health portals are dedicated web pages for medical practices to provide patients access to their electronic health records. The problem identified in this quality improvement project was that the health portal in the urgent care setting had not been available to staff nor patients. To provide leader...

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Main Author: Simmons, Anita Joyce
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: ScholarWorks 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/3071
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4174&context=dissertations
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spelling ndltd-waldenu.edu-oai-scholarworks.waldenu.edu-dissertations-41742019-10-30T01:11:12Z Health Portal Functionality and the Use of Patient-Centered Technology Simmons, Anita Joyce Health portals are dedicated web pages for medical practices to provide patients access to their electronic health records. The problem identified in this quality improvement project was that the health portal in the urgent care setting had not been available to staff nor patients. To provide leadership with information related to opening the portal, the first purpose of the project was to assess staff and patients' perceived use, ease of use, attitude toward using, and intention to use the portal. The second purpose was to evaluate the portal education materials for the top 5 urgent care diagnoses: diabetes, hypertension, asthma, otitis media, and bronchitis for understandability and actionability using the Patient Education Material Assessment Tool, Simple Measures of Goobledygook, and the Up to Date application. The first purpose was framed within the technology acceptance model which used a 26-item Likert scale ranging from -3 (total disagreement) to +3 (total agreement). The staff (n = 8) and patients (n = 75) perceived the portal as useful (62%; 60%), easy to use (72%; 70%), expressed a positive attitude toward using (71%; 73%), and would use the technology (54%; 70%). All materials were deemed understandable (74%-95%) with 70% being the acceptable percentage. Diabetes, otitis media, and bronchitis were deemed actionable (71-100%), but hypertension (57%) and asthma (40%) had lower actionability percentages. Hypertension, asthma, and otitis media had appropriate reading levels (6-8th grade). However, diabetes (10th grade) and bronchitis (12th grade) were higher with the target being less than 8th grade level. All handouts were found to be evidence-based. Recommendations were to revise the diabetes and bronchitis educational handouts to improve readability. Social change can be promoted by this project by facilitating positive patient outcomes at urgent care clinics. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/3071 https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4174&context=dissertations Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies en ScholarWorks Health Information Technology Health Portal Meaningful Use Patient-Centered Care Technology Acceptance Model Urgent Care Clinic Databases and Information Systems Nursing Public Health Education and Promotion
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Health Information Technology
Health Portal
Meaningful Use
Patient-Centered Care
Technology Acceptance Model
Urgent Care Clinic
Databases and Information Systems
Nursing
Public Health Education and Promotion
spellingShingle Health Information Technology
Health Portal
Meaningful Use
Patient-Centered Care
Technology Acceptance Model
Urgent Care Clinic
Databases and Information Systems
Nursing
Public Health Education and Promotion
Simmons, Anita Joyce
Health Portal Functionality and the Use of Patient-Centered Technology
description Health portals are dedicated web pages for medical practices to provide patients access to their electronic health records. The problem identified in this quality improvement project was that the health portal in the urgent care setting had not been available to staff nor patients. To provide leadership with information related to opening the portal, the first purpose of the project was to assess staff and patients' perceived use, ease of use, attitude toward using, and intention to use the portal. The second purpose was to evaluate the portal education materials for the top 5 urgent care diagnoses: diabetes, hypertension, asthma, otitis media, and bronchitis for understandability and actionability using the Patient Education Material Assessment Tool, Simple Measures of Goobledygook, and the Up to Date application. The first purpose was framed within the technology acceptance model which used a 26-item Likert scale ranging from -3 (total disagreement) to +3 (total agreement). The staff (n = 8) and patients (n = 75) perceived the portal as useful (62%; 60%), easy to use (72%; 70%), expressed a positive attitude toward using (71%; 73%), and would use the technology (54%; 70%). All materials were deemed understandable (74%-95%) with 70% being the acceptable percentage. Diabetes, otitis media, and bronchitis were deemed actionable (71-100%), but hypertension (57%) and asthma (40%) had lower actionability percentages. Hypertension, asthma, and otitis media had appropriate reading levels (6-8th grade). However, diabetes (10th grade) and bronchitis (12th grade) were higher with the target being less than 8th grade level. All handouts were found to be evidence-based. Recommendations were to revise the diabetes and bronchitis educational handouts to improve readability. Social change can be promoted by this project by facilitating positive patient outcomes at urgent care clinics.
author Simmons, Anita Joyce
author_facet Simmons, Anita Joyce
author_sort Simmons, Anita Joyce
title Health Portal Functionality and the Use of Patient-Centered Technology
title_short Health Portal Functionality and the Use of Patient-Centered Technology
title_full Health Portal Functionality and the Use of Patient-Centered Technology
title_fullStr Health Portal Functionality and the Use of Patient-Centered Technology
title_full_unstemmed Health Portal Functionality and the Use of Patient-Centered Technology
title_sort health portal functionality and the use of patient-centered technology
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2017
url https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/3071
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4174&context=dissertations
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