Electronic Communication Between Children’s Caregivers and Health Care Teams: Scoping Review on Parental Caregiver’s Perceptions and Experience
Electronic Communication Between Children’s Caregivers and Health Care Teams: Scoping Review on Parental Caregiver’s Perceptions and Experience

Electronic Communication Between Children’s Caregivers and Health Care Teams: Scoping Review on Parental Caregiver’s Perceptions and Experience

JMIR Pediatr Parent. 2024 Dec 13;7:e60352. doi: 10.2196/60352.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Asynchronous communication via electronic modes (e-communication), including patient portals, secure messaging services, SMS text messaging, and email, is increasingly used to supplement synchronous face-to-face medical visits; however, little is known about its quality in pediatric settings.

OBJECTIVE: This review aimed to summarize contemporary literature on pediatric caregivers’ experiences with and perspectives of e-communication with their child’s health care team to identify how e-communication has been optimized to improve patient care.

METHODS: A scoping review following the Arksey and O’Malley methodological framework searched PubMed, CINAHL, Embase, and Web of Science using terms such as “Electronic Health Records” and “Communication” from 2013 to 2023 that discussed caregiver experiences and perspectives of e-communication with their child’s health care provider. Studies were excluded if they were abstracts, non-English papers, nonscientific papers, systematic reviews, or quality improvement initiatives, or pertained to synchronous telemedicine. We conducted a two-step screening process by scanning the title and abstract and reviewing the full text by two independent screeners to confirm eligibility. From an initial 903 articles identified via the database search, 23 articles fulfilled all the inclusion criteria and are included in this review.

RESULTS: Of the 23 articles meeting the inclusion criteria, 11 used quantitative methods, 7 used qualitative methods, and 5 used mixed methods. The caregiver sample sizes ranged from 51 to 3339 in the quantitative studies and 8 to 36 in the qualitative and mixed methods studies. A majority (n=17) used the patient portal that was self-categorized by the study. Secure messaging through a portal or other mobile health app was used in 26% (n=6) of the studies, while nonsecure messaging outside of the portal was used 17% (n=4) of the time and email was used 33.3% (n=8) of the time. In 19 of the studies, parents reported positive experiences with and a desire for e-communication methods.

CONCLUSIONS: The literature overwhelmingly supported caregiver satisfaction with and desire for e-communication in health care, but no literature intentionally studied how to improve the quality of e-communication, which is a critical gap to address.

PMID:39671597 | DOI:10.2196/60352