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- Title
A Comparison of Electronic Patient-Portal Use Among Patients with Resident and Attending Primary Care Providers.
- Authors
Chan, Brian; Lyles, Courtney; Kaplan, Celia; Lam, Rosemary; Karliner, Leah
- Abstract
<bold>Background: </bold>Electronic patient-portals offer the potential to enhance patient-physician communication and health outcomes but differential use may create or worsen disparities. While prior studies identified patient characteristics associated with patient-portal use, the role of physician factors is less known. We investigated differences in overall and patterns of portal use for patients with resident and attending primary care providers (PCPs).<bold>Methods: </bold>Cross-sectional study of all established patients with a resident or attending PCP seen at an academic internal medicine practice (two sites) between May 1, 2014, and April 30, 2015. We defined patient-portal use as having accessed any "active" (secure messaging, medication refill request), or "passive" (viewing labs, after visit summaries, or appointments) patient-portal function more than once over the study period. We used generalized linear models clustered on PCP to examine the odds of patient-portal use by PCP type, adjusted for patient age, gender, preferred language, race/ethnicity, insurance, and visits. Among patient-portal users, we examined the association of PCP type with "active use" utilizing the same method.<bold>Results: </bold>The mean patient age (n = 17,699) was 54.2 (SD 17.5), with 47.2% White, 23.6% Asian, 8.8% Black, 8.4% Latino, and 12% other/unknown. The majority (61.8%) had private insurance, and attending PCPs (76.9%). Although 72.3% enrolled in the patient-portal, only 53.4% were portal users; 40.0% were active users. There were 47 attending and 62 resident physicians. Patients with resident PCPs had lower odds of using the portal compared to those with attending PCPs (OR = 0.54, 95% CI 0.50-0.59). Similarly, among portal users, residents' patients had lower odds of being active users of the portal (OR = 0.76, 95% CI 0.68-0.87).<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Given the lower patient-portal use among residents' patients, residency programs should develop curricula to bolster trainee competence in using the patient-portal for communication and to enhance the patient-physician relationship. Future research should explore additional physician factors that impact portal use.
- Subjects
PHYSICIAN-patient privilege; PATIENT monitoring; PHYSICIAN-patient relations; HEALTH outcome assessment; PRIMARY care
- Publication
JGIM: Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2018, Vol 33, Issue 12, p2085
- ISSN
0884-8734
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1007/s11606-018-4637-x