Health IT, Hospitals

Why is the Patient Portal Failing to Gain Traction Among Patients and Doctors?

Patient engagement is all the rage now days; almost every healthcare facility is implementing or […]

Patient engagement is all the rage now days; almost every healthcare facility is implementing or planning to implement some form of a patient portal to meet the needs of meaningful use.

This sounds nice but,

Here is the problem, well several problems with the current patient portals that are in the market today.

 

 

Patients have no interest

The reason why most patients do not want to use their patient portal is because they see no value in it, they are just not interested.

The portals do not properly incentivize the patient either intellectually (providing enough data to prove useful) or financially. (Both in time and/or value)  Patients who are generally healthy have real lives and aren’t interested in fixating on a “health portal” or a “Facebook of Health” every day. Life is busy enough.

Patients are not interested in the meaningful use requirements and that healthcare organizations will lose money if they do not create an account and actually use the software as is the case with the Mayo Clinic.  Only 5% of all the patients who registered with the patient portal actually use it.

What do patients really want?

  • To talk to a real doctor – Patients want to actually talk with real people about their health, qualified doctors and nurses.  Not use an electronic form to determine if they are going to live or die.  While online forums are great for getting a basic understanding of your current health, it is not a substitute for a real doctor.
  • Safe-guarding private patient data – Patients also do not want their private health information sold to other’s for profit, as is with the case of companies like CVS which provides its customers a chance to earn $50 dollars per year in coupons by filling prescriptions.  But in order to earn the rewards, customers have to sign a HIPAA release.  Which basically means that CVS makes un-knowing customers waive their rights under the law in order to make a profit, shame on you CVS.

A major breach recently occurred when Practice Fusion exposed private patient data online for all eyes to see. Read more on Forbes –
Medical Start-up Invited Millions Of Patients To Write Reviews They May Not Realize Are Public. Some Are Explicit.  Be careful which systems you choose to manage your practice and patients, it could come back to cost you in the long run.

Quote from a patient

“I am 46 years old and (as a patient) am with Mayo in Florida. I have a Patient Portal and the iPhone app, but I am pretty healthy (knock on wood!) and generally only see my Family Doctor once a year in October for a check-up and a flu shot. I like the idea that Mayo has a neat health app, but I don’t find any reason to use it except to check the date & time of my annual appt and change it if necessary. And I have used the map to find where I’m going, because I’m HOPELESS that way!

I consider myself very internet-savvy, but there’s just no reason for me to be logging in to my Mayo portal all the time. There’s no UTILITY in it for me. I think a lot of ordinarily healthy patients my age and younger would be in the same boat.

 

Doctors have no interest

It’s not just that patients won’t use it, but doctors don’t either. And many lack the competent support of a team (nurse, admin, etc.) who fill the gap when EMR/Portals are simply something they can’t practically grasp. While all the doctors are supposedly able to see who I saw when and what was done, etc., few, if any, actually do.

Several doctors don’t even use the computer during a visit while a few spend more time navigating through screens and typing than anything else. Then there are the scores of times I go to a visit and they can’t check me in, look this or that up, etc., because the system is down.

Interesting survey:

What is interesting is that over 16.4 percent said that hospital employment and their EMR was limiting their ability to make more money.

  • Too much time spent on activities related to implementing, learning, training, and using EMR
  • Time spent negatively impacted the amount of (billable) productive/clinical time they could spend with patients
  • Reduces productive face-time with patients

Thanks to Fred Pennic of www.hitconsultant.net  for the pie chart.  Read more about the physician survey on his website.

 

Systems are cumbersome

(That is putting it nicely)

The systems are too cumbersome and too high maintenance. They are not practical and there is no accountability throughout practices that require all doctors actually use it. Also, one of the BIGGEST issues with them is that DOCTORS and PATIENTS alike are not fully vested in their creation, usability, etc. This happens all the time…many projects have doctors on board but it’s in a disconnected way, not effectual.

Quote from a doctor

I do use the portals…however, not 1 provides all the records a patient should have which requires securing them usually in paper form from the office. If I wasn’t so vigilant about having all my records and actually reviewing them for accuracy (thanks to horrid charting error experiences at the nation’s “#1? Orthopedics Hospital…), I would hardly ever use it…

 The bottom line is that EPIC is terrible. The doctors who are not getting back to you via EPIC are probably not doing so because the hour or two of their time per day that they maybe previously had to respond to patient questions is now spent on inputting data into EPIC. I know my workday has expanded by about 90 minutes since my hospital went up on EPIC last year. If you have docs spend an hour plus per day doing data entry, that is that much less time they have to spend on patient care.

 

Doctors and Staff forced to use low quality solutions

Healthcare practices (Hospitals, general practitioners, specialists) do not want to spend the time and money to invest in building better solutions themselves, thus they rely on vendors such as Amazing Charts, EPIC, Cerner, etc.  Unfortunately little has have changed for many vendors since their software looks like it was created in 1995 as evident by their extremely poor user interface and design as seen in an example below. (Look similar to yours?)

Have something nice to say about your patient portal or EMR?

I have personally talked to hundreds of healthcare faciltiies about issues with their current EMR, and in most cases 90 percent plus have nothing nice to say (quality, installation, training, support, etc)  How is it that we as healthcare industry put up with such low quality programs is beyond me.  We need to force our vendors to put up or ship out.

Vendors that do not upgrade will get trounced over the next 10 years with new up-and-coming startups (like your very own referralMD,  which is a private social referral network for hospitals and clinics) that are ready to replace them with user-tested interfaces that are much simpler to use and provide actionable data that will help increase the efficiency of your organization.

 

What’s your thoughts?

Tell us your story of how bad you hate your software, or if your brave tell us your success story.

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