Abstract

BackgroundOnline patient portals have the potential to improve patient engagement and health care outcomes. This is especially true among rural patient populations that may live far from their health care providers and for whom transportation is a barrier to accessing care. This study compared the characteristics of active users of an online patient portal to non-users and assessed utilization among users in a rural academic primary care clinic to identify disparities in adoption and use.MethodsWe conducted a cross sectional study of 28,028 patients in a general internal medicine clinic between June 2019 and May 2020 to assess (a) characteristics of patients who had an online patient portal account and used the patient portal compared to those who did not register for an account, and (b) the frequency of use of the patient portal (number of logons and number of messages sent and received) by patients over the study period. We compared results based on demographic characteristics, focusing on gender, age, race, presence or absence of nine chronic illnesses, smoking status, and BMI.ResultsIn the study cohort of 28,028 patients, 82% were active users of the patient portal. Females, patients aged 41–65, and non-smokers were more likely to use the portal than their counterparts. In total, patients with eight out of nine chronic illness groups studied (heart failure, cerebrovascular disease, history of a myocardial infarction, peripheral vascular disease, and renal disease) were less likely to use the patient portal than patients without these chronic conditions. On average, patients log onto the patient portal 25 times per year and send and receive 6 messages to and from the clinic. We found that females, patients older than 65, former smokers and obese patients logged on and sent and received more messages compared to the overall cohort. Although the sample size was small, on average Black patients logged onto the patient portal 19 times and sent and received 3.6 messages compared to White patients who logged on 25 times with 5.8 messages on average over the yearlong study period.ConclusionsIn a rural academic internal medicine clinic, female patients, aged 41–65, non-smokers, and those without certain chronic conditions were more likely to use an online patient portal. Recognizing and addressing barriers to patient portal use is essential for robust and sustained patient portal uptake and ensuring that the benefits of portal use are equally distributed among all patients.

Highlights

  • Online patient portals have the potential to improve patient engagement and health care outcomes

  • Understanding utilization among a defined population of patients is important for planning for staffing needs to respond to and address the increasing volume of portal messages that are sent by patients through the patient portal. This cross-sectional study was conducted at DartmouthHitchcock Medical Center, a rural academic medical center located in Lebanon, New Hampshire that serves a population of approximately 1.9 million patients from New Hampshire and Vermont [13]

  • General characteristics of portal users A total of 28,028 patients in the general internal medicine clinic were evaluated during the study period

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Summary

Introduction

Online patient portals have the potential to improve patient engagement and health care outcomes. This is especially true among rural patient populations that may live far from their health care providers and for whom transportation is a barrier to accessing care. Utilizing common portal functionalities such as reviewing progress notes, visit summaries, and communicating with providers outside of traditional office visits may encourage patients to follow recommended care plans in order to better manage chronic health conditions and improve their health outcomes [2, 4, 5]. Published studies about patient portal use have primarily examined urban (or mixed urban and rural) populations that may differ in terms of physical distance to their health care providers, access to health care providers, availability of internet access or had overall low rates of portal enrollment [7, 9–12]

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