1. The Veteran-Initiated Electronic Care Coordination: A Multisite Initiative to Promote and Evaluate Consumer-Mediated Health Information Exchange
- Author
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Kathleen M. Grant, Adam Bluth, Kim M. Nazi, Leila Samy, Gary Kochersberger, Adi V. Gundlapalli, Carolyn Turvey, J. Stacey Klutts, Dawn M. Klein, Matthew J. Witry, Laurie Pfeiffer, Sergio Romero, Brian Vetter, and Kassi Pham
- Subjects
Male ,Rural Population ,Telemedicine ,Health Information Exchange ,020205 medical informatics ,Computer User Training ,Health Informatics ,02 engineering and technology ,Telehealth ,Access to Information ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medication Reconciliation ,Health Information Management ,Nursing ,Continuity of Care Document ,Health care ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Medicine ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Veterans Affairs ,health care economics and organizations ,Aged ,Veterans ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Patient portal ,Health information exchange ,General Medicine ,computer.file_format ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,United States ,United States Department of Veterans Affairs ,Patient Satisfaction ,Female ,Medical emergency ,Patient Participation ,business ,computer - Abstract
Information continuity is critical to person-centered care when patients receive care from multiple healthcare systems. Patients can access their electronic health record data through patient portals to facilitate information exchange. This pilot was developed to improve care continuity for rural Veterans by (1) promoting the use of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) patient portal to share health information with non-VA providers, and (2) evaluating the impact of health information sharing at a community appointment.Veterans from nine VA healthcare systems were trained to access and share their VA Continuity of Care Document (CCD) with their non-VA providers. Patients and non-VA providers completed surveys on their experiences.Participants (n = 620) were primarily older, white, and Vietnam era Veterans. After training, 78% reported the CCD would help them be more involved in their healthcare and 86% planned to share it regularly with non-VA providers. Veterans (n = 256) then attended 277 community appointments. Provider responses from these appointments (n = 133) indicated they were confident in the accuracy of the information (97%) and wanted to continue to receive the CCD (96%). Ninety percent of providers reported the CCD improved their ability to have an accurate medication list and helped them make medication treatment decisions. Fifty percent reported they did not order a laboratory test or another procedure because of information available in the CCD.This pilot demonstrates feasibility and value of patient access to a CCD to facilitate information sharing between VA and non-VA providers. Outreach and targeted education are needed to promote consumer-mediated health information exchange.
- Published
- 2016