Making health information technology more patient-centered
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Personal health records have great potential to help patients manage their health, but technology needs to be designed with the patient in mind – which means doing more than helping patients access health information, according to an editorial by two Virginia Commonwealth University family medicine physicians published in the Jan.19 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
In the editorial, Alexander Krist, M.D., M.P.H., associate professor in the Department of Family Medicine in the VCU School of Medicine, together with Steven Woolf, M.D., M.P.H., professor in the Department of Family Medicine and director of the VCU Center for Human Needs, describe a model to guide the creation of more patient-centered personal health records.
The model describes how personal health records should include five key functions: to collect and store information from patients; to collect and store information from the patient’s doctor; to translate clinical information into lay language; to tell patients how to improve their health based on their personal information; and to make the information actionable for patients.
Using principles from their model, Krist and Woolf’s research team has created a patient-centered personal health record for prevention called “MyPreventiveCare,” which shows patients their medical information and tells them what it means in a way they can understand. Further, it guides them to the next action steps.
“Currently, most personal health records do little more than store and show patients’ information,” Krist said. “We are not taking full advantage of technology.
“A patient-centered personal health record should make information actionable. It should allow patients to access and coordinate care, provide personally tailored decision aids and educational materials, prioritize individual needs and integrate care across primary and specialty care,” said Krist
MyPreventiveCare and the model to make personal health records more patient-centered are the foundation for the work of three active grants being led by Krist and Woolf. Their current investigation aims to determine if “MyPreventiveCare” can improve patients’ use of preventive care services.
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EDITOR’S NOTE: A copy of the editorial is available to reporters in PDF format by email request from JAMA/Archives Media Relations Office at or by phone at (312) 464-5262.
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Contact: Sathya Achia Abraham
804-827-0890
Virginia Commonwealth University
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