Democratizing epilepsy care: Utility and usability of an electronic patient portal

2021 
Abstract Objectives Electronic patient portals (ePortals) can facilitate greater healthcare democratization by providing patients and/or their authorized care partners with secure access to their medical records when and where needed. Such democratization can promote effective healthcare provider–patient partnerships, shared decision-making, and greater patient engagement in managing their health condition. This study examined the usefulness of providing individualized services and care in epilepsy (PiSCES), an epilepsy ePortal, as an enabler of more democratized epilepsy care. Methods Seventy-two individuals with epilepsy and 18 care partners were invited to report on their experience of interacting via PiSCES with clinical documents (epilepsy care summary record; epilepsy clinic letters) authored about them by healthcare providers. The OpenNotes reporting tool was adapted to capture participant experience. Results Twenty-five percent of invited patients and 44% of invited care partners reported on interacting with their epilepsy care summary; 14% of patients and 67% of care partners invited reported on their epilepsy clinic letters. Participant testimonials illustrate the value of PiSCES in: promoting autonomy, aiding memory, developing the knowledgeable patient, and enhancing healthcare partnerships. Ninety-six percent and 100% of respondents, respectively, reported understanding their epilepsy care summary and epilepsy clinic letter; 77% said the summary described their epilepsy history to date; 96% indicated that the letter provided an accurate description of their clinical encounter; 92% and 96%, respectively, valued access to their summary record and clinic letters; 77% of summary record and 73% clinic letter respondents reported learning something about their epilepsy or the healthcare service via PiSCES. Illustrating their potential patient and care partner safety role, 42% respondents identified inaccuracies in their clinical documents which were subsequently resolved by a clinician. Significance In the post-digital world highly customized on-demand products and services have come to be expected. Similarly, in epilepsy care, technologies such as PiSCES can enable more personalized, transparent, and engaging services.
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