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The Role of Computer Skills in Personal Health Record Adoption Among Patients With Heart Disease: Multidimensional Evaluation of Users Versus Nonusers
Author(s) -
Martina A. Clarke,
Ann L. Fruhling,
Elizabeth L Lyden,
Alvin Tarrell,
Tamara Bernard,
John R. Windle
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
jmir human factors
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2292-9495
DOI - 10.2196/19191
Subject(s) - medicine , demographics , ethnic group , significant difference , health literacy , disease , literacy , family medicine , gerontology , psychology , health care , demography , pedagogy , sociology , anthropology , economics , economic growth
Background In the era of precision medicine, it is critical for health communication efforts to prioritize personal health record (PHR) adoption. Objective The objective of this study was to describe the characteristics of patients with heart disease that choose to adopt a PHR. Methods A total of 79 patients with chronic cardiovascular disease participated in this study: 48 PHR users and 31 nonusers. They completed 5 surveys related to their choice to use or not use the PHR: demographics, patient activation, medication adherence, health literacy, and computer self-efficacy (CSE). Results There was a significant difference between users and nonusers in the sociodemographic measure education ( P =.04). There was no significant difference between users and nonusers in other sociodemographic measures: age ( P =.20), sex ( P =.35), ethnicity ( P =.43), race ( P =.42), and employment ( P =.63). There was a significant difference between PHR users and PHR nonusers in CSE ( P =.006). Conclusions In this study, we demonstrate that sociodemographic characteristics were not an important factor in patients’ use of their PHR, except for education. This study had a small sample size and may not have been large enough to detect differences between groups. Our results did demonstrate that there is a difference between PHR users and nonusers related to their CSE. This work suggests that incorporating CSE into the design of PHRs is critical. The design of patient-facing tools must take into account patients’ preferences and abilities when developing effective user-friendly health information technologies.

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