护理伙伴参与糖尿病患者与临床医生之间的安全信息传递:队列研究。

Q2 Medicine
JMIR Diabetes Pub Date : 2024-02-09 DOI:10.2196/49491
Wagahta Semere, Andrew J Karter, Courtney R Lyles, Mary E Reed, Leah Karliner, Celia Kaplan, Jennifer Y Liu, Jennifer Livaudais-Toman, Dean Schillinger
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:患者通过数字患者门户网站参与安全信息传递(SM)与糖尿病治疗效果的改善有关,包括患者满意度的提高和血糖控制的改善。然而,在老年患者以及服务不足的种族和民族群体中,SM 的使用率存在差异。护理伙伴(家庭成员或朋友)可能是缓解这些差异的一种方法;然而,护理伙伴是否以及在多大程度上可以提高 SM 的使用率,目前仍不清楚:我们旨在研究老年糖尿病患者使用 SM 的情况是否因护理伙伴代理的参与而有所不同:这是ECLIPPSE(采用计算语言学改进患者-医疗服务提供者安全电子邮件)项目的一项子研究,该项目是一项队列研究,在一个大型、全面整合的医疗服务系统中进行,该系统拥有一个成熟的数字患者门户网站,为400多万患者提供服务。参与者包括年龄≥50 岁的 2 型糖尿病患者,他们在患者门户网站上进行了新注册,并在 2006 年 7 月 1 日至 2015 年 12 月 31 日期间向临床医生发送了≥1 封英语邮件。代理 SM 通过注册代理进行识别。为了识别未注册的代理,采用了一种计算语言学算法来检测与患者自发信息相比更有可能出现在代理信息中的单词和短语。主要结果是年度安全信息量(发送或接收);次要结果是患者或代理发送第一条安全信息的时间长度和年度安全信息交换次数(产生≥1条回复的唯一信息主题):在本研究开始时,群组(N=7659)的平均年龄为 61(SD 7.16)岁;75%(n=5573)已婚,15%(n=1089)为黑人,10%(n=747)为华人,12%(n=905)为菲律宾人,13%(n=999)为拉丁裔,30%(n=2225)为白人。此外,49%(n=3782)的患者在一定程度上使用了代理人。与不使用代理服务的患者相比,使用代理服务的患者年龄更大(PConclusions:在一组老年糖尿病患者中,代理SM的参与与更早开始SM和更高强度的信息传递有独立关联,尽管它似乎并没有减轻SM中现有的差异。这些研究结果表明,在糖尿病护理中,护理伙伴可以加强患者与医生之间的远程沟通。未来的研究应探讨护理伙伴参与 SM 对糖尿病相关护理质量和临床结果的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Care Partner Engagement in Secure Messaging Between Patients With Diabetes and Their Clinicians: Cohort Study.

Background: Patient engagement with secure messaging (SM) via digital patient portals has been associated with improved diabetes outcomes, including increased patient satisfaction and better glycemic control. Yet, disparities in SM uptake exist among older patients and racial and ethnic underserved groups. Care partners (family members or friends) may provide a means for mitigating these disparities; however, it remains unclear whether and to what extent care partners might enhance SM use.

Objective: We aim to examine whether SM use differs among older patients with diabetes based on the involvement of care partner proxies.

Methods: This is a substudy of the ECLIPPSE (Employing Computational Linguistics to Improve Patient-Provider Secure Emails) project, a cohort study taking place in a large, fully integrated health care delivery system with an established digital patient portal serving over 4 million patients. Participants included patients with type 2 diabetes aged ≥50 years, newly registered on the patient portal, who sent ≥1 English-language message to their clinician between July 1, 2006, and December 31, 2015. Proxy SM was identified by having a registered proxy. To identify nonregistered proxies, a computational linguistics algorithm was applied to detect words and phrases more likely to appear in proxy messages compared to patient-authored messages. The primary outcome was the annual volume of secure messages (sent or received); secondary outcomes were the length of time to the first SM sent by patient or proxy and the number of annual SM exchanges (unique message topics generating ≥1 reply).

Results: The mean age of the cohort (N=7659) at this study's start was 61 (SD 7.16) years; 75% (n=5573) were married, 15% (n=1089) identified as Black, 10% (n=747) Chinese, 12% (n=905) Filipino, 13% (n=999) Latino, and 30% (n=2225) White. Further, 49% (n=3782) of patients used a proxy to some extent. Compared to nonproxy users, proxy users were older (P<.001), had lower educational attainment (P<.001), and had more comorbidities (P<.001). Adjusting for patient sociodemographic and clinical characteristics, proxy users had greater annual SM volume (20.7, 95% CI 20.2-21.2 vs 10.9, 95% CI 10.7-11.2; P<.001), shorter time to SM initiation (hazard ratio vs nonusers: 1.30, 95% CI 1.24-1.37; P<.001), and more annual SM exchanges (6.0, 95% CI 5.8-6.1 vs 2.9, 95% CI 2.9-3.0, P<.001). Differences in SM engagement by proxy status were similar across patient levels of education, and racial and ethnic groups.

Conclusions: Among a cohort of older patients with diabetes, proxy SM involvement was independently associated with earlier initiation and increased intensity of messaging, although it did not appear to mitigate existing disparities in SM. These findings suggest care partners can enhance patient-clinician telecommunication in diabetes care. Future studies should examine the effect of care partners' SM involvement on diabetes-related quality of care and clinical outcomes.

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来源期刊
JMIR Diabetes
JMIR Diabetes Computer Science-Computer Science Applications
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
审稿时长
16 weeks
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