1. [Value of shared electronic health records for the management of homeless people]
- Author
-
Maeva, Jego, Gaëtan, Gentile, Bernard, Giusiano, Roland, Sambuc, Hubert, Balique, and Stéphanie, Gentile
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Patient Access to Records ,Primary Health Care ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Hospital Shared Services ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Middle Aged ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Young Adult ,Ill-Housed Persons ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Female ,Aged - Abstract
To assess the acceptability for GPS to use the French shared Electronic Health Record (Dossier Médical Partagé, "DMP") when caring for Homeless People (HP).Mixed, sequential, qualitative-quantitative study. The qualitative phase consisted of semi-structured interviews with GPs involved in the care of HP. During the quantitative phase, questionnaires were sent to 150 randomized GPs providing routine healthcare in Marseille. Social and practical acceptability was studied by means of a Likert Scale.19 GPs were interviewed during the qualitative phase, and 105 GPs answered the questionnaire during the quantitative phase (response rate: 73%). GPs had a poor knowledge about DMP. More than half (52.5%) of GPs were likely to effectively use DMP for HP. GPs felt that the "DMP" could improve continuity, quality, and security of care for HP. They perceived greater benefits of the use the DMP for HP than for the general population, notably in terms of saving time (p = 0.03). However, GPs felt that HP were vulnerable and wanted to protect their patients; they worried about security of data storage. GPs identified specific barriers for HP to use DMP: most of them concerned practical access for HP to DMP (lack of social security card, or lack of tool for accessing internet).A shared electronic health record, such as the French DMP, could improve continuity of care for HP in France. GPs need to be better informed, and DMP functions need to be optimized and adapted to HP, so that it can be effectively used by GPs for HP.
- Published
- 2018