2008
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m2547
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A Research Agenda for Personal Health Records (PHRs)

Abstract: A b s t r a c t Patients, policymakers, providers, payers, employers, and others have increasing interest in using personal health records (PHRs) to improve healthcare costs, quality, and efficiency. While organizations now invest millions of dollars in PHRs, the best PHR architectures, value propositions, and descriptions are not universally agreed upon. Despite widespread interest and activity, little PHR research has been done to date, and targeted research investment in PHRs appears inadequate. The authors… Show more

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Cited by 341 publications
(255 citation statements)
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“…[1][2][3][4] Portals and PHRs are currently used by only about 7% of Americans 5 , but they are growing in popularity 5,6 and are likely to become more common in light of the Department of Health and Human Services' 2010 rule to encourage "meaningful use" of health information technology, under which providers and hospitals can receive incentives for measures such as providing patients with electronic copies of their health information upon request. 7 To benefit from such electronic communication, however, consumers and patients will require computer and Internet access 8 , computer literacy 9 , health literacy 10,11 , and numeracy.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[1][2][3][4] Portals and PHRs are currently used by only about 7% of Americans 5 , but they are growing in popularity 5,6 and are likely to become more common in light of the Department of Health and Human Services' 2010 rule to encourage "meaningful use" of health information technology, under which providers and hospitals can receive incentives for measures such as providing patients with electronic copies of their health information upon request. 7 To benefit from such electronic communication, however, consumers and patients will require computer and Internet access 8 , computer literacy 9 , health literacy 10,11 , and numeracy.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Surprisingly, given the substantial body of research that documents the importance of health literacy in health behaviors and outcomes, [21][22][23] it has been largely overlooked as a determinant of health IT use. 24,25 One study 16 used a large sample of patients with diabetes enrolled in a single health plan in northern California to document the importance of health literacy as a predictor of Internet-based patient portal use, even after controlling for basic demographic characteristics. This finding supports the idea that individuals with low health literacy are on the wrong side of the digital divide; however, no population-based study to date has estimated the relationship between health literacy and use of the Internet to obtain health information in the general population of older Americans.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…12 In addition, we identified few publications that focused on methods of educating primary healthcare trainees on the use of EMRs in practice. This is a definite gap in research which needs to be addressed, given the eventual ubiquity of EMRs in primary health care and the need to use this technology in effective ways during patient encounters.…”
Section: Implications Of the Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%