Abstract

BackgroundVarious problems concerning the introduction of personal health records in everyday healthcare practice are reported to be associated with physicians’ unfamiliarity with systematic means of electronically collecting health information about their patients (e.g. electronic health records - EHRs). Such barriers may further prevent the role physicians have in their patient encounters and the influence they can have in accelerating and diffusing personal health records (PHRs) to the patient community. One way to address these problems is through medical education on PHRs in the context of EHR activities within the undergraduate medical curriculum and the medical informatics courses in specific. In this paper, the development of an educational PHR activity based on Google Health is reported. Moreover, student responses on PHR’s use and utility are collected and presented. The collected responses are then modelled to relate the satisfaction level of students in such a setting to the estimation about their attitude towards PHRs in the future.MethodsThe study was conducted by designing an educational scenario about PHRs, which consisted of student instruction on Google Health as a model PHR and followed the guidelines of a protocol that was constructed for this purpose. This scenario was applied to a sample of 338 first-year undergraduate medical students. A questionnaire was distributed to each one of them in order to obtain Likert-like scale data on the sample’s response with respect to the PHR that was used; the data were then further analysed descriptively and in terms of a regression analysis to model hypothesised correlations.ResultsStudents displayed, in general, satisfaction about the core PHR functions they used and they were optimistic about using them in the future, as they evaluated quite high up the level of their utility. The aspect they valued most in the PHR was its main role as a record-keeping tool, while their main concern was related to the negative effect their own opinion might have on the use of PHRs by patients. Finally, the estimate of their future attitudes towards PHR integration was found positively dependent of the level of PHR satisfaction that they gained through their experience (rho = 0.524, p <0.001).ConclusionsThe results indicate that students support PHRs as medical record keeping helpers and perceive them as beneficial to healthcare. They also underline the importance of achieving good educational experiences in improving PHR perspectives inside such educational activities. Further research is obviously needed to establish the relative long-term effect of education to other methods of exposing future physicians to PHRs.

Highlights

  • Various problems concerning the introduction of personal health records in everyday healthcare practice are reported to be associated with physicians’ unfamiliarity with systematic means of electronically collecting health information about their patients

  • The aim of this paper is twofold: first, to report on the development of an educational personal health records (PHRs) activity based on Google Health in the aforementioned undergraduate medical informatics module and to collect the students’ views on PHR functions and their concerns towards their use; second, to use these responses in order to try and relate the satisfaction level of students in such a setting with their likely attitude towards using PHRs in the future, thereby creating a model for improving positive attitudes by facilitating a rich experience of early PHR use and adoption

  • This paper described the organisation of a prototype preclinical patient-oriented educational scenario about PHRs in a medical informatics course

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Summary

Introduction

Various problems concerning the introduction of personal health records in everyday healthcare practice are reported to be associated with physicians’ unfamiliarity with systematic means of electronically collecting health information about their patients (e.g. electronic health records - EHRs). The importance of PHRs and eHealth and its impact especially on patient safety and risk management has been underlined [15,16] When it comes to medical conditions, results concerning the effect of PHR use on patient health quality measures (e.g. in cases of hypertension, diabetes) reveal little or no significant improvement [17,18]. It is anticipated that additional education may increase PHR use and hopefully the impact of such clinical interventions [17]

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