Many Hospitals Fail to Provide Instructions for Patient Portals

Authors say hospitals need to provide patients with more information and clarify expectations for use
Woman using laptop computer late at night
Woman using laptop computer late at night

THURSDAY, Dec. 26, 2019 (HealthDay News) -- Many hospital patient portals fail to educate patients fully and set expectations for secure messaging, according to a study recently published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.

Joy L. Lee, Ph.D., from the Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, and colleagues reviewed the information made available to patients about patient portal use and assessed ease in accessing such information from hospital websites. The survey included data from a random sample of 200 acute-care hospitals, 50 from each of four U.S. Census regions, selected from the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Hospital Compare dataset.

The researchers found that 89 percent of hospitals had a patient portal, with two-thirds of these having secure messaging functionality. The majority of portals with secure messaging (65 portals; 58 percent) did not describe appropriate patient messaging conduct. While many hospitals included disclaimers that the service is not for emergencies, 23 hospitals only included this information within the fine prints of their terms and conditions section. Patient-directed materials focused on logistical content, features of the portals, and parameters of use, with logistical content (e.g., creating an account) being the most thorough.

"To improve patient engagement and minimize harm, hospitals and clinicians need to provide more information and set clearer guidelines for patients," the authors write.

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