Digital engagement and the efficacy of patient portal-based preventive care interventions.

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
DIGITAL HEALTH Pub Date : 2025-06-27 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1177/20552076251356013
Marcus A Rauhut
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Many adults are overdue for important screenings and vaccines, but providers have limited resources to address these care gaps. Electronic messaging, including patient portal messaging, can be an effective intervention to increase screening and vaccine adherence. However, there is limited research examining variables influencing intervention efficacy beyond demographic variables.

Objective: This study aims to identify whether patient portal engagement and primary care visits affect the efficacy of patient portal-based screening or vaccine reminders.

Methods: A retrospective analysis of electronic medical record data was used to evaluate the completion of screening mammograms, influenza vaccinations, and fecal immunochemical test (FIT) screenings for approximately 400,000 MyChart patient portal users at a large integrated health system. A logistic regression analysis was performed to calculate odds ratios associated with intervention completion.

Results: When adjusted for age, race, and sex, MyChart engagement is associated with increased odds of completing patient portal interventions for mammograms, flu vaccines, and FIT screenings. When adjusted for age, race, and sex, primary care visits are associated with increased odds of completing flu vaccines and FIT screenings but not mammograms following a patient portal intervention.

Conclusions: Overall patient portal engagement is critical to portal-based preventive health interventions. These interventions are most successful when combined with office-based interventions, but there is a potential in some scenarios that digital interventions can be successful without office-based interventions. This research contributes to the existing literature around screening adherence and patient portals' impact on health outcomes.

数字参与和基于患者门户的预防护理干预的有效性。
背景:许多成年人已经错过了重要的筛查和疫苗接种,但提供者在解决这些护理缺口方面的资源有限。电子信息,包括患者门户网站信息,可成为提高筛查和疫苗依从性的有效干预措施。然而,除了人口统计变量之外,对影响干预效果的变量的研究有限。目的:本研究旨在确定患者门户参与和初级保健访问是否影响患者门户筛查或疫苗提醒的效果。方法:对电子病历数据进行回顾性分析,以评估大型综合卫生系统中约40万MyChart患者门户用户的乳房x光检查、流感疫苗接种和粪便免疫化学试验(FIT)筛查的完成情况。进行逻辑回归分析以计算干预完成相关的优势比。结果:当对年龄、种族和性别进行调整后,MyChart的参与与完成乳房x光检查、流感疫苗和FIT筛查的患者门户干预的几率增加有关。当根据年龄、种族和性别进行调整时,初级保健就诊与完成流感疫苗和FIT筛查的几率增加有关,但与患者门静脉干预后乳房x光检查的几率无关。结论:总体患者门户参与对基于门户的预防性健康干预至关重要。这些干预措施与基于办公室的干预措施相结合时最为成功,但在某些情况下,没有基于办公室的干预措施,数字干预措施也可能取得成功。本研究有助于现有文献围绕筛查依从性和患者门户对健康结果的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
DIGITAL HEALTH
DIGITAL HEALTH Multiple-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
7.70%
发文量
302
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