Using Medical Records for Older Patient Education in Ambulatory Practice

The effectiveness of sharing medical records in improving physician-older patient communication was evaluated in 203 ambulatory chronically ill older patients (mean age, 70.1 years) by a randomized controlled trial. Ninety-five experimental group patients received copies of their physicians' progress notes 1 week after their last office visit, and 108 control patients did not. After 1-2 weeks, knowledge of health problems, medication, and nonmedication treatments was assessed by interview. Experimental group patients knew 74.1% of their health problems, compared with 64.1% in the control groups (P < 0.05). There was no difference in knowledge of medications or adherence to medication regimens. Experimental group patients displayed higher treatment knowledge scores than control group patients (P < 0.01). Less-educated patients showed greater adherence to nonmedication treatments. Shared medical records can enhance physician-older patient communication about health problems and nonmedication treatments, but they do little to enhance medication knowledge or adherence to medication regimens.

[1]  B Blackwell,et al.  Drug therapy: patient compliance. , 1973, The New England journal of medicine.

[2]  K. Wallston,et al.  Locus of Control and Health: A Review of the Literature , 1978, Health education monographs.

[3]  H Kenneth Walker,et al.  APPLYING THE PROBLEM-ORIENTED SYSTEM , 1975 .

[4]  A. Barsky,et al.  Diagnosis and management of patient noncompliance. , 1974, JAMA.

[5]  S. Kaplan,et al.  Expanding patient involvement in care. Effects on patient outcomes. , 1985, Annals of internal medicine.

[6]  L L Kupper,et al.  Communication, compliance, and concordance between physicians and patients with prescribed medications. , 1976, American journal of public health.

[7]  E. Neely,et al.  PROBLEMS OF AGED PERSONS TAKING MEDICATIONS AT HOME , 1968, Nursing research.

[8]  S. Rachman Contributions to medical psychology , 1980 .

[9]  Bronson Dl,et al.  Patient education through record sharing. , 1978 .

[10]  B. Korsch,et al.  Gaps in doctor-patient communication. Patients' response to medical advice. , 1969, The New England journal of medicine.

[11]  D SCHWARTZ,et al.  Medication errors made by elderly, chronically ill patients. , 1962, American journal of public health and the nation's health.

[12]  T. Szasz,et al.  A contribution to the philosophy of medicine; the basic models of the doctor-patient relationship. , 1956, A.M.A. archives of internal medicine.

[13]  D. C. Warner,et al.  Sounding board. Giving the patient his medical record: a proposal to improve the system. , 1973, The New England journal of medicine.

[14]  S. Mazzuca,et al.  Does patient education in chronic disease have therapeutic value? , 1982, Journal of chronic diseases.

[15]  Alan F. Westin,et al.  Computers, health records, and citizen rights , 1976 .

[16]  P Ley,et al.  Patients' satisfaction and reported acceptance of advice in general practice. , 1975, The Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[17]  R. Brian Haynes,et al.  Compliance in Health Care , 1979 .

[18]  P. Ley 2 – PSYCHOLOGICAL STUDIES OF DOCTOR-PATIENT COMMUNICATION , 1977 .