Associations between patient portal use and electronic health record (EHR) data timeliness in type 2 diabetes mellitus care

Author:

Wiley KevinORCID,Blackburn Justin,Mendonca Eneida,Menachemi Nir,De Groot Mary,Vest Joshua R.

Abstract

Abstract Objective Patient data is subject to missingness and errors. Patient portals enable patients managing type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) to review and correct data to avoid retesting, medication errors, and diagnostic mistakes. We examined whether patient portal use was associated with electronic health record (EHR) data timeliness in T2DM care. Research Design and methods We analyzed EHR data from a panel of adult patients to determine whether portal use improved data timeliness. EHR data timeliness is measured as the number of days between patient encounters, accounting for mean attribute update periods, where available EHR attribute updates for T2DM measurements were present, including body mass, weight, glycated hemoglobin A1c, cholesterol, blood pressure, serum creatinine, and smoking status. We performed negative binomial regressions with fixed effects to estimate the association between patient portal use and EHR data timeliness. Sensitivity analyses were conducted using Poisson regressions. Results Nearly a third (31.3%) of patients in our sample actively used the health portal. There were fewer days (111.9 days vs. 136.7 days; p < 0.001) between EHR attribute updates for patients who used health portals compared to patients who did not. Data timeliness was lower among female, non-Hispanic White Medicare beneficiaries. Based on regression analyses, portal use was associated with an expected 3.6 (p < 0.001) percentage point decrease in days between attribute updates, indicating improved EHR timeliness. Conclusion Improving the quality of health information may streamline decision-making in partnership with patients who produce data points across clinical settings. Active use of patient portals and digital health tools in chronic disease care are critical for care management and clinical decision-making, especially for patients managing type 2 diabetes across clinical settings.

Funder

Medical University of South Carolina

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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