Patient Data Access News

Health Literacy Doesn’t Stand in the Way of Patient Data Access

Patients see value in open notes and patient data access, and factors like health literacy and threats to the patient-provider relationship are not significant, a survey shows.

patients see value in patient data access, open notes

Source: Getty Images

By Sara Heath

- Patient data access and open notes are nearly universally appreciated by patients, with a new survey from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, which was obtained via email, showing that concerns about patient health literacy or harm to the patient-provider relationship don’t unfold under an open notes philosophy.

The survey, issued at two dermatology clinics affiliated with Brigham and Women’s, showed that around 84 percent of patients use the patient portal to look at clinician notes and that only about one in ten had problems understanding medical terminology or medical abbreviations.

Just under 2 percent of respondents demonstrated deteriorating trust in their dermatologist after viewing open clinician notes, demonstrating that open clinician notes are not the threat to the patient-provider relationship some previously worried they may be.