• Journal of patient safety · Sep 2013

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Using a patient internet portal to prevent adverse drug events: a randomized, controlled trial.

    • Saul N Weingart, Alexander Carbo, Anjala Tess, Laurel Chiappetta, Sherri Tutkus, Laurinda Morway, Maria Toth, Roger B Davis, Russell S Phillips, and David W Bates.
    • Center for Patient Safety, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. sweingart@tuftsmedicalcenter.org
    • J Patient Saf. 2013 Sep 1; 9 (3): 169-75.

    ObjectivesAdverse drug events (ADEs) are common in ambulatory care and may result from poor patient-physician communication about medication-related symptoms. A module was developed within an electronic patient portal that was designed to enhance communication about medication symptoms and, in turn, reduce ADEs and health-care utilization.MethodsThe researchers conducted a randomized, controlled clinical trial of MedCheck, an automated electronic message generated in a patient Internet portal. MedCheck asked intervention patients if they had filled a recent prescription and if they had experienced any problems with the medication. Patients' responses were forwarded automatically to primary care physicians. The study enrolled 375 intervention patients and 363 controls. After 3 months, the investigators reviewed patients' medical records and conducted telephone interviews to identify ADEs and to assess health-care utilization.ResultsAmong the 375 intervention patients, 184 (49%) responded to at least 1 MedCheck message. Patients reported 52 unfilled prescriptions and 56 medication problems. Patients responded to 72% of messages within 1 day. There was no statistically significant difference between intervention and control groups in the rate of ADEs, preventable or ameliorable ADEs, serious ADEs, or in subjects' health-care utilization.ConclusionsInternet portals have the potential to enhance patient-physician communication. However, additional development is required to demonstrate that such interventions can improve medication safety or health-care utilization.

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