Affiliation:
1. American University of Beirut
2. University of Birmingham
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Mobile apps facilitate access to patient portals and interaction with their healthcare providers. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated this trend globally, but little evidence exists on patient portal usage in the Middle East, where internet access and digital literacy are limited. Our study aimed to explore how users utilize a patient portal through its related mobile app (MyChart by EPIC).
Methods
We conducted a cross-sectional survey of MyChart users recruited from a tertiary care center in Lebanon. We collected MyChart usage patterns, perceived outcomes, and app quality based on the Mobile Application Rating Scale (user version, uMARS) and sociodemographic factors. We examined associations between app usage, app quality, and sociodemographic factors using Pearson’s correlations, Chi-square, ANOVA, and t-tests.
Results
428 users completed the survey; they were primarily female (63%), aged 41.3 ± 15.6 years, with a higher education level (87%) and a relatively high crowding index of 1.4 ± 0.6. Most of the sample was in good and very good health (78%) and had no chronic illnesses (67%), and accessed the portal through MyChart once a month or less (71%). The most frequently used features were accessing health records (98%), scheduling appointments (67%), and messaging physicians (56%). According to uMARS completers (n = 200), the objective quality score was 3.8 ± 0.5, and the subjective quality was 3.6 ± 0.7. No significant association was found between overall app usage and the mobile app quality measured via uMARS. Moreover, app use frequency was negatively associated with education, socioeconomic status, perceived health status, and chronic conditions. On the other hand, app use was positively related to the number of physician visits and subjective app quality.
Conclusion
The patient portal usage was not associated with app quality but with some of the participants' demographic factors. The app offers a user-friendly, good-quality interface to patient health records and physicians, appreciated chiefly by females with relatively low socioeconomic status and education. While this is encouraging, more research is needed to capture the usage patterns and perceptions of male patients and those with even lower education and socioeconomic status to make patient portals more inclusive.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC