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Oncology Patient Portal Enrollment at a Comprehensive Cancer Center: A Quality Improvement Initiative
Author(s) -
Nadine J. McCleary,
Teresa Lau Greenberg,
Constance M. Barysauskas,
Elissa J. Guerette,
Malyun Hassan,
Joseph O. Jacobson,
Deborah Schrag
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of oncology practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.555
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1935-469X
pISSN - 1554-7477
DOI - 10.1200/jop.17.00008
Subject(s) - medicine , psychological intervention , family medicine , ambulatory , stakeholder , quality management , nursing , management system , public relations , management , political science , economics
Purpose: Patient portals (PPs) provide patients access to their electronic health record and may facilitate active engagement in their care. Because PP use has not been well studied among patients with cancer, we sought to: understand the willingness of patients with cancer to use the PP, identify barriers to PP use, and improve PP accessibility.Materials and Methods: As part of an institutional quality improvement initiative, we used a stakeholder-driven approach to examine PP use at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (Boston, MA). We conducted a survey across all ambulatory oncology practices as well as staff and patient focus groups in one ambulatory practice. We deployed three interventions to address barriers: staff education, staff-assisted enrollment support, and independent enrollment support.Results: In October 2015, 1,019 (87%) of 1,178 eligible patients completed the survey (PP enrolled, 57%; non–PP enrolled, 43%). PP-enrolled patients reported reviewing test results and appointment schedules. Non–PP-enrolled patients cited difficult PP enrollment, lack of computer access, and concern about sharing data electronically as barriers to PP enrollment. Focus groups (staff, n = 20; patient representatives, n = 5) also identified lack of awareness of PP benefits as a barrier. The interventions, deployed from November to December 2015, increased PP enrollment from 47% to 53% by January 2016.Conclusion: Patients with cancer want to communicate with their team through the PP, but barriers to enrollment impede use. Straightforward system-level interventions may increase enrollment. Further work is necessary to ascertain the degree to which increased PP enrollment leads to greater engagement and better outcomes.

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