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A web-based social network tool (GENIE) for supporting self-management among high users of the health care system: feasibility and usability study

A web-based social network tool (GENIE) for supporting self-management among high users of the health care system: feasibility and usability study
A web-based social network tool (GENIE) for supporting self-management among high users of the health care system: feasibility and usability study
Background: primary care providers are well positioned to foster self-management through linking patients to community-based health and social services (HSSs). This study evaluated a web-based tool—GENIE (Generating Engagement in Network Involvement)—to support the self-management of adults. GENIE empowers patients to leverage their personal social networks and increase their access to HSSs. GENIE maps patients’ personal social networks, elicits preferences, and filters local HSSs from a community service directory based on patient’s interests. Trained volunteers (an extension of the primary care team) conducted home visits and conducted surveys related to life and health goals in the context of the Health TAPESTRY (Teams Advancing Patient Experience: Strengthening Quality) program, in which the GENIE tool was implemented. GENIE reports were uploaded to an electronic medical record for care planning by the team.

Objective: this study aims to explore patients’, volunteers’, and clinicians’ perceptions of the feasibility, usability, and perceived outcomes of GENIE—a tool for community-dwelling adults who are high users of the health care system.

Methods: this study involved 2 primary care clinician focus groups and 1 clinician interview (n=15), 1 volunteer focus group (n=3), patient telephone interviews (n=8), field observations that captured goal-action sequences to complete GENIE, and GENIE utilization statistics. The patients were enrolled in a primary care program—Health TAPESTRY—and Ontario’s Health Links Program, which coordinates care for the highest users of the health care system. NVivo 11 (QSR International) was used to support qualitative data analyses related to feasibility and perceived outcomes, and descriptive statistics were used for quantitative data.

Results: most participants reported positive overall perceptions of GENIE. However, feasibility testing showed that participants had a partial understanding of the tool; volunteer facilitation was critical to support the implementation of GENIE; clinicians perceived their navigation ability as superior to that of GENIE supported by volunteers; and tool completion took 39 minutes, which made the home visit too long for some. Usability challenges included difficulties completing some sections of the tool related to medical terminology and unclear instructions, limitations in the quality and quantity of HSSs results, and minor technological challenges. Almost all patients identified a community program or activity of interest. Half of the patients (4/8, 50%) followed up on HSSs and added new members to their network, whereas 1 participant lost a member. Clinicians’ strengthened their understanding of patients’ personal social networks and needs, and patients felt less social isolation.

Conclusions: this study demonstrated the potential of GENIE, when supported by volunteers, to expand patients’ social networks and link them to relevant HSSs. Volunteers require training to implement GENIE for self-management support, which may help overcome the time limitations faced by primary care clinicians. Refining the filtering capability of GENIE to address adults’ needs may improve primary care providers’ confidence in using such tools.
Valaitis, Ruta
4904aa21-2cc1-481b-9fe9-a34254227b41
Cleghorn, Laura
f3540125-9e80-4199-9f89-f968d2edf28b
Vassilev, Ivaylo
d76a5531-4ddc-4eb2-909b-a2a1068f05f3
Rogers, Anne
62492e15-ce4e-45b9-847c-6d220de99b67
Ploeg, Jenny
00c3b553-88df-47c4-8568-f39054615471
Kothari, Anita
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Risdon, Cathy
aea326f3-847d-46dc-aec7-21793327c026
Gillett, James
70489ee2-f0f1-40fa-a161-fb5cc559e62c
Guenter, Dale
ee8b2a4e-140a-4db4-b46a-3689c090dcbb
Dolovich, Lisa
da776d9e-cd96-481e-ada3-72a66039403f
Valaitis, Ruta
4904aa21-2cc1-481b-9fe9-a34254227b41
Cleghorn, Laura
f3540125-9e80-4199-9f89-f968d2edf28b
Vassilev, Ivaylo
d76a5531-4ddc-4eb2-909b-a2a1068f05f3
Rogers, Anne
62492e15-ce4e-45b9-847c-6d220de99b67
Ploeg, Jenny
00c3b553-88df-47c4-8568-f39054615471
Kothari, Anita
9386f771-3b56-4bed-a014-3d9211bf4da0
Risdon, Cathy
aea326f3-847d-46dc-aec7-21793327c026
Gillett, James
70489ee2-f0f1-40fa-a161-fb5cc559e62c
Guenter, Dale
ee8b2a4e-140a-4db4-b46a-3689c090dcbb
Dolovich, Lisa
da776d9e-cd96-481e-ada3-72a66039403f

Valaitis, Ruta, Cleghorn, Laura, Vassilev, Ivaylo, Rogers, Anne, Ploeg, Jenny, Kothari, Anita, Risdon, Cathy, Gillett, James, Guenter, Dale and Dolovich, Lisa (2021) A web-based social network tool (GENIE) for supporting self-management among high users of the health care system: feasibility and usability study. JMIR Formative Research, 5 (7). (doi:10.2196/25285).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: primary care providers are well positioned to foster self-management through linking patients to community-based health and social services (HSSs). This study evaluated a web-based tool—GENIE (Generating Engagement in Network Involvement)—to support the self-management of adults. GENIE empowers patients to leverage their personal social networks and increase their access to HSSs. GENIE maps patients’ personal social networks, elicits preferences, and filters local HSSs from a community service directory based on patient’s interests. Trained volunteers (an extension of the primary care team) conducted home visits and conducted surveys related to life and health goals in the context of the Health TAPESTRY (Teams Advancing Patient Experience: Strengthening Quality) program, in which the GENIE tool was implemented. GENIE reports were uploaded to an electronic medical record for care planning by the team.

Objective: this study aims to explore patients’, volunteers’, and clinicians’ perceptions of the feasibility, usability, and perceived outcomes of GENIE—a tool for community-dwelling adults who are high users of the health care system.

Methods: this study involved 2 primary care clinician focus groups and 1 clinician interview (n=15), 1 volunteer focus group (n=3), patient telephone interviews (n=8), field observations that captured goal-action sequences to complete GENIE, and GENIE utilization statistics. The patients were enrolled in a primary care program—Health TAPESTRY—and Ontario’s Health Links Program, which coordinates care for the highest users of the health care system. NVivo 11 (QSR International) was used to support qualitative data analyses related to feasibility and perceived outcomes, and descriptive statistics were used for quantitative data.

Results: most participants reported positive overall perceptions of GENIE. However, feasibility testing showed that participants had a partial understanding of the tool; volunteer facilitation was critical to support the implementation of GENIE; clinicians perceived their navigation ability as superior to that of GENIE supported by volunteers; and tool completion took 39 minutes, which made the home visit too long for some. Usability challenges included difficulties completing some sections of the tool related to medical terminology and unclear instructions, limitations in the quality and quantity of HSSs results, and minor technological challenges. Almost all patients identified a community program or activity of interest. Half of the patients (4/8, 50%) followed up on HSSs and added new members to their network, whereas 1 participant lost a member. Clinicians’ strengthened their understanding of patients’ personal social networks and needs, and patients felt less social isolation.

Conclusions: this study demonstrated the potential of GENIE, when supported by volunteers, to expand patients’ social networks and link them to relevant HSSs. Volunteers require training to implement GENIE for self-management support, which may help overcome the time limitations faced by primary care clinicians. Refining the filtering capability of GENIE to address adults’ needs may improve primary care providers’ confidence in using such tools.

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Accepted/In Press date: 31 May 2021
Published date: 12 July 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 456199
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456199
PURE UUID: 385b2cc6-dc8a-4221-9432-aea98644e928
ORCID for Ivaylo Vassilev: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2206-8247

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Date deposited: 26 Apr 2022 16:46
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:32

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Contributors

Author: Ruta Valaitis
Author: Laura Cleghorn
Author: Ivaylo Vassilev ORCID iD
Author: Anne Rogers
Author: Jenny Ploeg
Author: Anita Kothari
Author: Cathy Risdon
Author: James Gillett
Author: Dale Guenter
Author: Lisa Dolovich

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