Understanding the EMR-Related Experiences of Pregnant Japanese Women to Redesign Antenatal Care EMR Systems
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- RQ1: What are the current EMR-related experiences of pregnant Japanese women?
- RQ2: What are the ideal EMR-related experiences for pregnant Japanese women?
- RQ3: How important are the different EMR-related experiences for pregnant Japanese women?
1.1. Background—Antenatal Care
1.2. Background—Antenatal Care in Japan
1.3. Background—General Overview of EMR Systems in Examination Rooms
1.4. Background—Patient Attitudes towards EMR Systems
1.5. Background—EMR Systems in Japanese Antenatal Care Settings
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Field-Based Observational Study
2.1.1. Data Collection
2.1.2. Data Analysis
- Familiarization with the data: the researchers went through the data multiple times to gain a deeper understanding and familiarize themselves with it.
- Coding the data: after becoming familiar with the data, the researchers generated an initial set of codes. The codes were then associated with different parts of the notes. The coding process was repeated over three iterations during which the codes were extended and refined.
- Searching for the themes: at this stage, the researchers refocused the analysis on a broader level and extracted several themes by combining several codes together.
- Reviewing the themes: once the initial set of themes was identified, the researchers merged some themes together and discarded the themes that had little data associated with them.
- Defining and naming the themes: the themes were finally named and clearly defined in terms of EMR-related experiences.
- Producing the report: the resulting EMR-related experiences are presented in the results section.
2.2. Web Survey
- Currently, how much are pregnant Japanese women experiencing it?
- Ideally, how much or how would pregnant Japanese women want to experience it?
- How important is this EMR-related experience to pregnant Japanese women?
2.2.1. Web Survey Design
- The current frequency of the experience.
- The ideal frequency of the experience.Answers to these types of questions were reported on a 6-point Likert-type frequency scale, with 1 being the high end and 6 being the low end.
- The importance of the experience to them.Answers to this type of question were reported on the following scale (“1 = Very important”, “2 = Important”, “3 = Slightly important”, “4 = Not important”).
- Wanting the experience.Answers to this type of question were reported on the following scale (“1 = Strongly want”, “2 = Want”, “3 = Slightly want”, “4 = Do not want”, “5 = Do not care”).
- The importance of having the experience.Answers to this type of question were reported on the following scale (“1 = Very important”, “2 = Important”, “3 = Slightly important”, “4 = Not important”).
2.2.2. Web Survey Method
3. Results
3.1. EMR-Related Experiences
3.1.1. Explanation
3.1.2. Interruption
3.1.3. Exclusion
3.1.4. Distrust
3.1.5. Exchange
3.1.6. Online Viewing
3.1.7. Online Editing
3.1.8. Summarization
3.1.9. Assistance
3.2. Web Survey Participants
- Current experiences of Exclusion and Distrust.
- Aspired experiences of Explanation and Interruption.
- Priorities regarding the experience of Explanation.
3.3. Pregnant Japanese Women’s Attitudes toward the EMR-Related Experiences
3.3.1. Attitudes towards the Experience of Explanation
3.3.2. Attitudes towards the Experience of Interruption
3.3.3. Attitudes towards the Experience of Exclusion
3.3.4. Attitudes towards the Experience of Distrust
3.3.5. Attitudes towards the Experience of Exchange
3.3.6. Attitudes towards the Experience of Online Viewing
3.3.7. Attitudes towards the Experience of Online Editing
3.3.8. Attitudes towards the Experience of Summarization
3.3.9. Attitudes towards the Experience of Assistance
3.4. Summary of the Findings
4. Discussion
4.1. Different Women, Different Attitudes
4.2. Opportunities and Challenges
4.3. EMR System Design Implications
4.4. Limitations and Future Work
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Survey Questions
References
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Experience | Definition | Type |
---|---|---|
Explanation | The providers using the EMR screen as an explanation support tool. | Current |
Interruption | EMR systems hinder the communication of the women and their providers. | Current |
Exclusion | The pregnant women feeling excluded by not being able to see the EMR screen. | Current |
Distrust | Sensitive psychosocial data not being documented in detail inside the EMR. | Current |
Exchange | Different providers exchanging the women’s medical records. | Current |
Online Viewing | The pregnant women being able to view the contents of their EMRs online. | Future |
Online Editing | The pregnant women being able to add content to their EMRs online. | Future |
Summarization | The women having access to a summary of their pregnancy. | Future |
Assistance | The women being able to manage their antenatal care appointments online. | Future |
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Helou, S.; Abou-Khalil, V.; Yamamoto, G.; Kondoh, E.; Tamura, H.; Hiragi, S.; Sugiyama, O.; Okamoto, K.; Nambu, M.; Kuroda, T. Understanding the EMR-Related Experiences of Pregnant Japanese Women to Redesign Antenatal Care EMR Systems. Informatics 2019, 6, 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/informatics6020015
Helou S, Abou-Khalil V, Yamamoto G, Kondoh E, Tamura H, Hiragi S, Sugiyama O, Okamoto K, Nambu M, Kuroda T. Understanding the EMR-Related Experiences of Pregnant Japanese Women to Redesign Antenatal Care EMR Systems. Informatics. 2019; 6(2):15. https://doi.org/10.3390/informatics6020015
Chicago/Turabian StyleHelou, Samar, Victoria Abou-Khalil, Goshiro Yamamoto, Eiji Kondoh, Hiroshi Tamura, Shusuke Hiragi, Osamu Sugiyama, Kazuya Okamoto, Masayuki Nambu, and Tomohiro Kuroda. 2019. "Understanding the EMR-Related Experiences of Pregnant Japanese Women to Redesign Antenatal Care EMR Systems" Informatics 6, no. 2: 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/informatics6020015
APA StyleHelou, S., Abou-Khalil, V., Yamamoto, G., Kondoh, E., Tamura, H., Hiragi, S., Sugiyama, O., Okamoto, K., Nambu, M., & Kuroda, T. (2019). Understanding the EMR-Related Experiences of Pregnant Japanese Women to Redesign Antenatal Care EMR Systems. Informatics, 6(2), 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/informatics6020015