The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Patients' online access to their electronic health records and linked online services. A systematic interpretative review

Patients' online access to their electronic health records and linked online services. A systematic interpretative review
Patients' online access to their electronic health records and linked online services. A systematic interpretative review

OBJECTIVES: To investigate the effect of providing patients online access to their electronic health record (EHR) and linked transactional services on the provision, quality and safety of healthcare. The objectives are also to identify and understand: barriers and facilitators for providing online access to their records and services for primary care workers; and their association with organisational/IT system issues.

SETTING: Primary care.

PARTICIPANTS: A total of 143 studies were included. 17 were experimental in design and subject to risk of bias assessment, which is reported in a separate paper. Detailed inclusion and exclusion criteria have also been published elsewhere in the protocol.

PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Our primary outcome measure was change in quality or safety as a result of implementation or utilisation of online records/transactional services.

RESULTS: No studies reported changes in health outcomes; though eight detected medication errors and seven reported improved uptake of preventative care. Professional concerns over privacy were reported in 14 studies. 18 studies reported concern over potential increased workload; with some showing an increase workload in email or online messaging; telephone contact remaining unchanged, and face-to face contact staying the same or falling. Owing to heterogeneity in reporting overall workload change was hard to predict. 10 studies reported how online access offered convenience, primarily for more advantaged patients, who were largely highly satisfied with the process when clinician responses were prompt.

CONCLUSIONS: Patient online access and services offer increased convenience and satisfaction. However, professionals were concerned about impact on workload and risk to privacy. Studies correcting medication errors may improve patient safety. There may need to be a redesign of the business process to engage health professionals in online access and of the EHR to make it friendlier and provide equity of access to a wider group of patients. A1 SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION NUMBER: PROSPERO CRD42012003091.

Access to Information, Data Collection, Delivery of Health Care, Electronic Health Records, Humans, Patients, Quality of Health Care, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Review
2044-6055
e006021
de Lusignan, Simon
d3a4897a-91dd-4880-b273-f92c2fe6c42f
Mold, Freda
dd4a20ed-a6fe-4178-847a-a4aaa6f1cf11
Sheikh, Aziz
5b7eb24b-0820-4bd6-8304-cc46bbe561a8
Majeed, Azeem
856bd09f-2a1e-46c0-9377-e40c825fbaaf
Wyatt, Jeremy C.
8361be5a-fca9-4acf-b3d2-7ce04126f468
Quinn, Tom
6be2aa1d-fc2f-4610-b8d0-4f85a74828ed
Cavill, Mary
10123360-4fa9-498d-8394-3b5cc0fc7d8e
Gronlund, Toto Anne
2ba578ff-c07e-499b-a45b-3fdf104b421c
Franco, Christina
37f687c8-0960-4169-a16e-9501b55f08f7
Chauhan, Umesh
61bc8745-c1e9-4cc7-a8e4-bb26012e4e66
Blakey, Hannah
c7b2f006-8730-40fe-ba9f-872f28f229bc
Kataria, Neha
0f0796f8-8137-4d22-bab3-d36d8dd6e673
Barker, Fiona
531f9acb-d776-4beb-96a7-a9b020b5b11a
Ellis, Beverley
17b0473a-5c32-472d-8383-6fd1ac631ad3
Koczan, Phil
a96cce12-5d39-47f7-934b-ff7aa6f36f2e
Arvanitis, Theodoros N
142a7f83-000d-4301-8372-1dce1c9aeaf7
McCarthy, Mary
4d994b86-807d-4976-8c36-131a7a1e853c
Jones, Simon
f5d66e16-2c8e-4d48-ab97-0715a6e85c46
Rafi, Imran
10d6b041-00f9-4b2e-bbb8-2c55bfd58c1a
de Lusignan, Simon
d3a4897a-91dd-4880-b273-f92c2fe6c42f
Mold, Freda
dd4a20ed-a6fe-4178-847a-a4aaa6f1cf11
Sheikh, Aziz
5b7eb24b-0820-4bd6-8304-cc46bbe561a8
Majeed, Azeem
856bd09f-2a1e-46c0-9377-e40c825fbaaf
Wyatt, Jeremy C.
8361be5a-fca9-4acf-b3d2-7ce04126f468
Quinn, Tom
6be2aa1d-fc2f-4610-b8d0-4f85a74828ed
Cavill, Mary
10123360-4fa9-498d-8394-3b5cc0fc7d8e
Gronlund, Toto Anne
2ba578ff-c07e-499b-a45b-3fdf104b421c
Franco, Christina
37f687c8-0960-4169-a16e-9501b55f08f7
Chauhan, Umesh
61bc8745-c1e9-4cc7-a8e4-bb26012e4e66
Blakey, Hannah
c7b2f006-8730-40fe-ba9f-872f28f229bc
Kataria, Neha
0f0796f8-8137-4d22-bab3-d36d8dd6e673
Barker, Fiona
531f9acb-d776-4beb-96a7-a9b020b5b11a
Ellis, Beverley
17b0473a-5c32-472d-8383-6fd1ac631ad3
Koczan, Phil
a96cce12-5d39-47f7-934b-ff7aa6f36f2e
Arvanitis, Theodoros N
142a7f83-000d-4301-8372-1dce1c9aeaf7
McCarthy, Mary
4d994b86-807d-4976-8c36-131a7a1e853c
Jones, Simon
f5d66e16-2c8e-4d48-ab97-0715a6e85c46
Rafi, Imran
10d6b041-00f9-4b2e-bbb8-2c55bfd58c1a

de Lusignan, Simon, Mold, Freda, Sheikh, Aziz, Majeed, Azeem, Wyatt, Jeremy C., Quinn, Tom, Cavill, Mary, Gronlund, Toto Anne, Franco, Christina, Chauhan, Umesh, Blakey, Hannah, Kataria, Neha, Barker, Fiona, Ellis, Beverley, Koczan, Phil, Arvanitis, Theodoros N, McCarthy, Mary, Jones, Simon and Rafi, Imran (2014) Patients' online access to their electronic health records and linked online services. A systematic interpretative review. BMJ Open, 4 (9), e006021. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2014-006021).

Record type: Article

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To investigate the effect of providing patients online access to their electronic health record (EHR) and linked transactional services on the provision, quality and safety of healthcare. The objectives are also to identify and understand: barriers and facilitators for providing online access to their records and services for primary care workers; and their association with organisational/IT system issues.

SETTING: Primary care.

PARTICIPANTS: A total of 143 studies were included. 17 were experimental in design and subject to risk of bias assessment, which is reported in a separate paper. Detailed inclusion and exclusion criteria have also been published elsewhere in the protocol.

PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Our primary outcome measure was change in quality or safety as a result of implementation or utilisation of online records/transactional services.

RESULTS: No studies reported changes in health outcomes; though eight detected medication errors and seven reported improved uptake of preventative care. Professional concerns over privacy were reported in 14 studies. 18 studies reported concern over potential increased workload; with some showing an increase workload in email or online messaging; telephone contact remaining unchanged, and face-to face contact staying the same or falling. Owing to heterogeneity in reporting overall workload change was hard to predict. 10 studies reported how online access offered convenience, primarily for more advantaged patients, who were largely highly satisfied with the process when clinician responses were prompt.

CONCLUSIONS: Patient online access and services offer increased convenience and satisfaction. However, professionals were concerned about impact on workload and risk to privacy. Studies correcting medication errors may improve patient safety. There may need to be a redesign of the business process to engage health professionals in online access and of the EHR to make it friendlier and provide equity of access to a wider group of patients. A1 SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION NUMBER: PROSPERO CRD42012003091.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Published date: 8 September 2014
Keywords: Access to Information, Data Collection, Delivery of Health Care, Electronic Health Records, Humans, Patients, Quality of Health Care, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Review

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 414063
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/414063
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: dd905cff-284b-4fae-b048-6f27f6b2f42e
ORCID for Jeremy C. Wyatt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7008-1473

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 13 Sep 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:23

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Simon de Lusignan
Author: Freda Mold
Author: Aziz Sheikh
Author: Azeem Majeed
Author: Jeremy C. Wyatt ORCID iD
Author: Tom Quinn
Author: Mary Cavill
Author: Toto Anne Gronlund
Author: Christina Franco
Author: Umesh Chauhan
Author: Hannah Blakey
Author: Neha Kataria
Author: Fiona Barker
Author: Beverley Ellis
Author: Phil Koczan
Author: Theodoros N Arvanitis
Author: Mary McCarthy
Author: Simon Jones
Author: Imran Rafi

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×