Abstract
Abstract Introduction The Electronic Medical Record (EMR) has had a positive impact on healthcare but it has also increased administrative burden on physicians. One reason for this is the patient portal, which grants patients 24/7 access to ask their physician questions. Objective To characterize the patient message volume of urologists with a Men’s Health Practice by quantifying message volume per case, identifying procedures linked to high message volume, and examining demographics affecting patient portal use. We then assess the clinical utility of patient portal messages by examining their effect on Emergency Department (ED) utilization. Methods We queried the EMR of a health system spanning the southeast, midwest, and southwest using internal procedure and surgical codes for all office and operating room based urologic procedures from March 2017-November 2023. We identified procedures related to Men’s Health focusing on andrology, sexual medicine, and male reconstructive procedures. Patients identifying as women, those with multiple procedures within 6 months, and patients without research authorization were excluded. To identify factors associated with active portal users and message volume, we performed univariate and multivariable logistic and linear regression models. Multivariable models consisted of all statistically significant factors on univariate analysis. In models utilizing the procedure variable to compare message volume, vasectomy was chosen as the reference procedure due to it having the highest case volume. To assess the impact of active portal use (defined as sending at least 1 message within 6 months of their procedure) on risk of subsequent ED visit, we performed univariate Kaplan–Meier analysis and univariate and multivariable Cox Proportional Hazard models treating portal use as a time-dependent covariate. Results We examined 16,299 procedures which generated 49,422 messages within 6 months of their procedure (Table 1). Demographic data can be seen in table 2. On average, 3.04 ± 6.88 messages were generated after each procedure. The highest message generating procedures were testosterone Injection/pellets (5.83 ± 9.57), Itind (5.73 ± 14.18), and Transurethral Incision of the Prostate (5.19 ± 13.19). The lowest message generating procedures were vasectomy (1.30 ± 3.10), spermatocelectomy (1.67 ± 3.80), and circumcision (2.32 ± 5.26). The types of cases that generated the highest overall message burden were male reconstructive procedures (4.53 ± 8.57) and BPH procedures (4.07 ± 8.40) and. Slightly less than half of our cohort were active on the portal (45%) within 6 months of their procedure (Table 1). The procedures that were the most likely to have active portal users were microtese (OR 5.03 95% CI 2.38,10.67), testosterone injection/pellets (OR 4.86 95% CI 3.13, 7.54), and Itind (OR 3.02 95% CI 2.16, 4.24). On time to event analysis we found that portal usage decreased the risk of presenting to the Emergency Department (ED) by 15% within 90 days of their procedure [HR (95% CI) 0.65 0.85 (0.77, 0.93)] (Fig. 1). Conclusions Urologists practicing Men’s Health receive a high number of messages per procedure that they perform, however the use of the patient portal reduces ED utilization. Resources should be allocated to help urologists manage their patient messages as it lowers healthcare costs. Disclosure No.
Published Version
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