USE IT to Create Patient-Relation Management for Multiple Sclerosis Patients

Author(s):  
Margreet B. Michel-Verkerke ◽  
Roel W. Schuring ◽  
Ton A.M. Spil

Patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) visit various healthcare providers during the course of their disease. It was suggested that information and communication technology might help to orchestrate their care provision. We have applied the USE IT tool to get insight in the relevant problems, solutions, and constraints of MS care both in the organizational and the information-technological area. There is hardly a chain of healthcare, but rather, a network in which informal communication plays an important role. This informal network worked reasonably effective, but it was inefficient and slow. The MS patient count is small for most care providers. Patients thought that a lack of experience caused their major problems: insufficient and inadequate care. To improve care, we proposed a solution that combines an MS protocol, the introduction of a central coordinator of care and a patient-relation management (PRM) system. This is a simple Web-based application based on an agreement by the caregivers that supports routing, tracking, and tracing for an MS patient and supplies the caregivers with professional guidelines. It is likely that we would have suggested a far more complicated ICT solution if we had only analyzed the MS care process as such without specific consideration of the dimensions in the USE IT tool.

Author(s):  
Margreet B. Michel-Verke ◽  
Roel W. Schuring ◽  
Ton A.M. Spil

Patients with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) visit various healthcare providers during the course of their disease. It was suggested that Information and Communication Technology (ICT) might help to orchestrate their care provision. We have applied the USE IT-tool to get insight in the relevant problems, solutions and constraints of the MS-care both in the organizational and the information technological area. There is hardly a chain of healthcare, but rather, a network in which informal communication plays an important role. This informal network worked reasonably effective, but inefficient and slow. MS patients-count is only small for most care providers. Patients thought that lack of experience caused their major problems: insufficient and inadequate care. To improve care, we proposed a solution that combines an “MS-protocol”, the introduction of a central coordinator of care and a Patient Relation Management (PRM) system. This is a simple web-based application based on agreement by the caregivers that supports routing, tracking and tracing for an MS patient and supplies the caregivers with professional guidelines. It is likely that we would have suggested a far more complicated ICT-solution if we had only analyzed the MS-care process as such, without specific consideration of the dimensions in the USE IT-tool.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. e6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Wicks ◽  
David Brandes ◽  
Jinhee Park ◽  
Dimitri Liakhovitski ◽  
Tatiana Koudinova ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Immaculada Grau-Corral ◽  
Percy Efran Pantoja ◽  
Francisco J. Grajales III ◽  
Belchin Kostov ◽  
Valentí Aragunde ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND The presence of the mobile phone and devices is generating knowledge about the use of applications to support patient care, but there are few recommendations for apps dedicated to healthcare professionals OBJECTIVE To establish a validated scale to assess healthcare mobile applications is the most efficient step for health care providers and systems. The main goal is to create and validate a tool to evaluate health apps destined to be used by health professionals. METHODS A five steps simplified methodology to assess of the scale was followed. The first step consists of building a scale for professionals based on a literature review. Next step would be an expert panel validation by a Delphi method, rating web-based questionnaires to evaluate inclusion and weight of the indicators. It was agreed to carry out, as many iterations as necessary, to reach a consensus of 75%. Finally, a pilot of the score was developed to evaluate the reliability of the scale. For the inter-rater agreement assessment during the pilot, the Cohen Kappa was used. RESULTS After the literature review, a first scale draft was developed. Two rounds of interactions of the local investigation group and the external panel of experts were needed to select final indicators. Seventeen indicators were included in the score. For the pilot test, 280 apps were evaluated and 66 meet the criteria. The interrater agreement was strong (higher than 82% with significant kappa >0.72 per app and item). CONCLUSIONS We have developed, with a reproducible methodology, a tool that allows us to evaluate health applications for clinical, surgical and general medical providers. The ISYScore-PRO scale to be reliable and reproducible. The assessment permitted to consolidate every step of the methodology. We were able to reach consensus on the dimensions and items on the scale with only two rounds. The process of validation included two robust methodologies. The ISYScore-PRO scale is reliable and reproducible.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evan Perrault

Rationale, aims and objectives: When USA college students need medical care, their first destinations are usually campus health centers. Normally, staffed by a variety of care providers (e.g., nurse practitioners, physician assistants, physicians), students may be confused about who they may need to see and possibly hesitant to receive care. The present study sought to determine students’ knowledge about primary care providers and the qualities they would like to know about them prior to consultations. The goal of this paper is to improve the information campus health centers in terms of their ability to provide students health solutions when and where they need them. Methods: 534 USA college students from a large Midwestern USA university completed a web-based survey about their knowledge, attitudes and information preferences regarding their various care providers. They also viewed 3 experimentally manipulated biographies of providers and chose the provider they would want to visit. Results: The majority of students did not know the differences between physicians, physician assistants and nurse practitioners and the types of care that they could provide. About 9% stated they would not seek care and 16% would delay seeking care if unable to see a physician immediately. The most important pieces of information desired were providers’ philosophies of care, certifications, areas of specialization and length of time practising medicine. As students perceived greater similarities due to more personal information provided in the biographies, they viewed, uncertainty was reduced leading to higher levels of anticipated patient satisfaction and quality of care. Conclusions: USA college students need greater levels of education regarding the care that can be received from a variety of healthcare professionals. Information provided should also include more personal information about the providers to help reduce students’ uncertainty and to enable students to access services that are person-centered in their nature.


Author(s):  
Andre Guerra

Multiple sclerosis (MS) has long been labeled as a neurological disease with a high incidence among Canadians, women in particular. The disease first manifests itself in young adulthood (between the ages of 15 and 40 years). Areas of demyelination with a proliferation of astrocytes are found scattered in the white matter of MS patients, this leads to muscle weakness, numbness, disequilibrium, sphincter disturbance and other neurological dysfunctions. Recently Dr. Paolo Zamboni, a vascular surgeon at the University of Ferrara in Italy, found that many multiple sclerosis patients have a narrowing of some of the neck veins responsible for draining blood from the brain. According to Dr. Zamboni, this narrowing of the blood vessels leads to the deposit of iron in the defected veins, which restricts blood flow and is responsible for some of the MS complications. Dr. Zamboni achieved unblocking of the veins through angioplasty, a procedure normally used to open arteries affected by atherosclerosis. In one of his trials, 65 patients were given the procedure, which decreased the rate of occurrence of lesions, from 50% to 12% in patients. There was an improvement in mental and physical quality of life in most of the patients in this trial. Ethical questions are also discussed in this review. Dr. Zamboni`s studies suggest a genetic inheritance of factors that may lead to MS. Should health care providers institute a screening procedure in newborns? Would these screenings be mandatory? Would the screenings be free? 


Author(s):  
Karim Zarour

Most developing countries are generally characterized by some problems such as limited resources and professional isolation in the health area. Information and Communication Technology (ICT) is supposed to give solutions through the use of e-Healthcare technologies. Information and communication technologies are valuable tools used to establish and maintain connections within and between healthcare providers, and between healthcare providers and Patients. Telehomecare evolves constantly. It can aid disabled persons, increase patient compliance, enhance caregivers' effectiveness, and connect socially isolated individuals to their care providers. Various research works have investigated different aspects of ICT in the context of telehomecare in some developed and developing countries. This paper describes an architectural framework for the development of telehomecare in Algeria for diabetes measurement and remote monitoring.


2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (12) ◽  
pp. 785
Author(s):  
Sónia Batista ◽  
Ana Martins da Silva ◽  
Maria José Sá ◽  
Lívia Sousa ◽  
João De Sá ◽  
...  

Multiple sclerosis typically affects young women of reproductive age. Therefore, all healthcare providers involved in the follow-up of multiple sclerosis patients must be prepared to discuss pregnancy and breastfeeding issues, and provide the best possible counselling. However, there are still many doubts and heterogeneous clinical approaches partly due to the lack of consensus and guidelines. Concerning the handling of disease modifying therapies during pregnancy and the postpartum period, uncertainties have been complicated by the increase in recent years of the number of available treatments. This article aims to present the state-of-the-art and provide guidance based on the best level of available evidence and expert opinion regarding the management of multiple sclerosis patients at different stages: pregnancy planning, pregnancy, partum, and the postpartum period.


2006 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans-Ulrich Prokosch ◽  
Thomas Ganslandt ◽  
Roxana Corina Dumitru ◽  
Frank Ückert

SummaryIn this paper two major tasks of health telematics are identified: telemedicine to support the physicians and collaborative health information systems additionally incorporating the patient. In the field of telemedicine, exemplary scenarios of teleconsultation/teletherapy but also the creation of joint electronic patient records by several healthcare providers are described in detail and analysed. Those are teleradiology, telepathology, and telesurgery. On the other side, collaborative health information systems provide several means to actively incorporate the empowered patient in the care process. We illustrate the approach of sharing a patient's electronic medical record with the patient and distinguish it from alternative approaches, such as email communications between patients and doctors or patient empowerment through web-based information services. For all such applications, recent trends in research and implementation are analysed and the technological as well as legal requirements are discussed.


2007 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 89-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark White ◽  
Carmel Parker White ◽  
Candyce S. Russell

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