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Patient Preferences for Test Result Notification
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Patient Preferences for Test Result Notification

Samuel K Shultz, Robert Wu, John J Matelski, Xin Lu and Peter Cram
Journal of general internal medicine : JGIM, Vol.30(11), pp.1651-1656
11/2015
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-015-3344-0
PMCID: PMC4617924
PMID: 25944020
url
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-015-3344-0View
Published (Version of record) Open Access

Abstract

Patients are increasingly being given access to their test results, but little is known about how preferences vary with the test under consideration or the results of the test (normal or abnormal). This study was conducted to examine preferences for test result communication. We surveyed adults to explore their preferences for test result notification for three common diagnostic tests of varying "emotional impact" (dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry [DXA], genital herpes, and cancer biopsy) when test results were 1) normal and 2) abnormal. We conducted our survey between June and August 2012 on the campus of an academic medical center. For each scenario, subjects were asked to rank seven methods that might be used to communicate test results (letter, unsecured email, secured email, text message, telephone call, secure Web portal, office visit) in order of acceptability. The main measures were the percentage of respondents who ranked a particular test result notification method favorably and the percentage who ranked it as unacceptable. When test results were normal, subjects' notification preferences were generally similar for DXA, herpes and cancer biopsy, with telephone and letter ranked most favorably for all three tests. Conversely, text message and unsecured email were viewed as unacceptable notification methods for normal results by 45.0-55.0 % of subjects across all three tests. When test results were abnormal, office visits became more popular. A higher proportion of subjects ranked office visits as their most preferred notification method for our test with high "emotional impact" (cancer biopsy) (38.4 %) as compared to DXA (28.2 %) and herpes (27.9 %) (P = 0.02). For most test scenarios, younger subjects appeared to rank electronic communication modalities (secure email or Web portal) higher than older subjects, though this difference did not reach statistical significance (P = 0.29). Preferences for test result notification can differ substantially depending upon the test under consideration and results of the test. Providers and health care systems should consider these factors when deciding how to communicate results to patients.
United States Absorptiometry, Photon Academic Medical Centers Adult Aged Biopsy Communication Diagnostic Tests, Routine - psychology Electronic Mail Female Herpes Genitalis - pathology Humans Male Middle Aged Neoplasms - pathology Office Visits Patient Preference - statistics & numerical data Telephone Truth Disclosure

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