Use of the patient portal among older adults with diagnosed dementia and their care partners

Author:

Gleason Kelly T.1ORCID,Wu Mingche M. J.2,Wec Aleksandra2,Powell Danielle S.2,Zhang Talan3,Gamper Mary Jo1,Green Ariel R.3,Nothelle Stephanie3,Amjad Halima3,Wolff Jennifer L.2

Affiliation:

1. Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing Baltimore Maryland USA

2. Department of Health Policy and Management Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Baltimore Maryland USA

3. Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractINTRODUCTIONCare partners are at the forefront of dementia care, yet little is known about patient portal use in the context of dementia diagnosis.METHODSWe conducted an observational cohort study of date/time‐stamped patient portal use for a 5‐year period (October 3, 2017–October 2, 2022) at an academic health system. The cohort consisted of 3170 patients ages 65+ with diagnosed dementia with 2+ visits within 24 months. Message authorship was determined by manual review of 970 threads involving 3065 messages for 279 patients.RESULTSMost (71.20%) older adults with diagnosed dementia were registered portal users but far fewer (10.41%) had a registered care partner with shared access. Care partners authored most (612/970, 63.09%) message threads, overwhelmingly using patient identity credentials (271/279, 97.13%).DISCUSSIONThe patient portal is used by persons with dementia and their care partners. Organizational efforts that facilitate shared access may benefit the support of persons with dementia and their care partners.Highlights Patient portal registration and use has been increasing among persons with diagnosed dementia. Two thirds of secure messages from portal accounts of patients with diagnosed dementia were identified as being authored by care partners, primarily using patient login credentials. Care partners who accessed the patient portal using their own identity credentials through shared access demonstrate similar levels of activity to patients without dementia. Organizational initiatives should recognize and support the needs of persons with dementia and their care partners by encouraging awareness, registration, and use of proper identity credentials, including shared, or proxy, portal access.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Neurology (clinical),Developmental Neuroscience,Health Policy,Epidemiology

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