2 research outputs found

    Exploring the need for an oral health passport

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    Aim or Purpose: To establish the need for an oral health passport and explore the features that feed the local need in a time where the utilization of digital personal health records is considered appropriate and is expected to further enhance primary care's quality-of-service delivery Materials and Methods: In-depth semi-structured online interview were conducted with twenty-three potential users representing patients, oral health care providers, dental students and clinical and non-clinical support staff from UiTM dental Centre, Malaysia. The participants were asked regarding awareness of oral health, the need for oral health records accessibility via mobile application, the features required in an oral health based on user perception. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and thematically analyzed using the software NVivo. Results: All respondents were aware that sharing of oral health records is beneficial while 69.57% of respondents expressed positive perception regarding sharing of oral health records via mobile apps. Seven main themes emerged regarding the need for an oral health app; empowerment, improve quality of care, accessibility, ease communication, anxiety reduction, efficiency, technology. Features of a mobile oral health application that were identified as relevant were information on demographic, medical condition, oral health condition, oral health education, support management. Conclusions: This qualitative research with a diverse pool of participants indicates a need for oral health apps with a variety of features ranging from personal oral health information to prevention and healthcare delivery management. The findings provide researchers, app designers, and oral health care providers insights on how to develop oral health apps from the users’ perspective

    Adoption of a Digital Patient Health Passport as Part of a Primary Healthcare Service Delivery: Systematic Review

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    The utilization of digital personal health records is considered to be appropriate for present-time usage; it is expected to further enhance primary care’s quality-of-service delivery. Despite numerous studies conducted on digital personal health records, efforts in a systematic evaluation of the topic have failed to establish the specific benefits gained by patients, health providers, and healthcare systems. This study aimed to conduct a systematic review regarding the impact of digital personal health records in relation to the delivery of primary care. The review methods included five methodological elements that were directed by the review protocol 2020 (PRISMA). Over a time period of 10 years (2011–2021), 2492 articles were retrieved from various established databases, including Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed, EBSCO—Medline, and Google Scholar, and based on reference mining. The Mixed Method Appraisal Tool (MMAT) was used for quality appraisal. A thematic analysis was performed to develop the themes in this study. The thematic analysis performed on 13 articles resulted in seven main themes, which were empowering the patient, helping with communication, improving relationships, improving the quality of care, maintaining health records, sharing records, and saving time. We concluded the study by expanding the seven themes into 26 sub-themes, of which each served as answers to our main research question that prompted this systematic review
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