Publication | Closed Access
Improved Quality At Kaiser Permanente Through E-Mail Between Physicians And Patients
270
Citations
19
References
2010
Year
Family MedicineKaiser PermanenteBlood PressurePrimary CarePatient ExperienceHealth CommunicationDigital HealthPublic HealthTelehealthHealth Services ResearchHealth PolicyE-health ServiceEhealthOutcomes ResearchElectronic Health RecordQuality ImprovementHealth Information TechnologyHealthcare QualityMedical RecordsSecure Patient-physician E-mailHealth DataPatient-centered OutcomeE-mail Between PhysiciansPersonal Health RecordMedicineAmerican RecoveryPatient SatisfactionHealth Informatics
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act identified secure patient-physician e-mail messaging as an objective of the meaningful use of electronic health records. In our study of 35,423 people with diabetes, hypertension, or both, the use of secure patient-physician e-mail within a two-month period was associated with a statistically significant improvement in effectiveness of care as measured by the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS). In addition, the use of e-mail was associated with an improvement of 2.0-6.5 percentage points in performance on other HEDIS measures such as glycemic (HbA1c), cholesterol, and blood pressure screening and control.
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