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Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 10/2020

21.05.2020 | Original Research

Secure Messaging, Diabetes Self-management, and the Importance of Patient Autonomy: a Mixed Methods Study

verfasst von: Stephanie A. Robinson, PhD, Mark S. Zocchi, MPH, Dane Netherton, PhD, Arlene Ash, PhD, Carolyn M. Purington, MPH, Samantha L. Connolly, PhD, Varsha G. Vimalananda, MD, MPH, Timothy P. Hogan, PhD, Stephanie L. Shimada, PhD

Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Ausgabe 10/2020

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Abstract

Background

Diabetes is a complex, chronic disease that requires patients’ effective self-management between clinical visits; this in turn relies on patient self-efficacy. The support of patient autonomy from healthcare providers is associated with better self-management and greater diabetes self-efficacy. Effective provider-patient secure messaging (SM) through patient portals may improve disease self-management and self-efficacy. SM that supports patients’ sense of autonomy may mediate this effect by providing patients ready access to their health information and better communication with their clinical teams.

Objective

We examined the association between healthcare team–initiated SM and diabetes self-management and self-efficacy, and whether this association was mediated by patients’ perceptions of autonomy support from their healthcare teams.

Design

We surveyed and analyzed content of messages sent to a sample of patients living with diabetes who use the SM feature on the VA’s My HealtheVet patient portal.

Participants

Four hundred forty-six veterans with type 2 diabetes who were sustained users of SM.

Main Measures

Proactive (healthcare team-initiated) SM (0 or ≥ 1 messages); perceived autonomy support; diabetes self-management; diabetes self-efficacy.

Key Results

Patients who received at least one proactive SM from their clinical team were significantly more likely to engage in better diabetes self-management and report a higher sense of diabetes self-efficacy. This relationship was mediated by the patient’s perception of autonomy support. The majority of proactive SM discussed scheduling, referrals, or other administrative content. Patients’ responses to team-initiated communication promoted patient engagement in diabetes self-management behaviors.

Conclusions

Perceived autonomy support is important for diabetes self-management and self-efficacy. Proactive communication from clinical teams to patients can help to foster a patient’s sense of autonomy and encourage better diabetes self-management and self-efficacy.
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Metadaten
Titel
Secure Messaging, Diabetes Self-management, and the Importance of Patient Autonomy: a Mixed Methods Study
verfasst von
Stephanie A. Robinson, PhD
Mark S. Zocchi, MPH
Dane Netherton, PhD
Arlene Ash, PhD
Carolyn M. Purington, MPH
Samantha L. Connolly, PhD
Varsha G. Vimalananda, MD, MPH
Timothy P. Hogan, PhD
Stephanie L. Shimada, PhD
Publikationsdatum
21.05.2020
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Ausgabe 10/2020
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Elektronische ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-020-05834-x

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