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JAMIA 2009;16:267-270 doi:10.1197/jamia.M2835
  • Original Investigation
  • Case Report

Initial Experience with Patient-Clinician Secure Messaging at a VA Medical Center

  1. John M Byrnea,b,
  2. Shane Elliotta,
  3. Anthony Fireka,b
  1. aVA Loma Linda Healthcare System, Loma Linda, CA
  2. bLoma Linda University School of Medicine, Loma Linda, CA
  1. Correspondence: John M. Byrne, DO, Loma Linda VA Healthcare System, 11201 Benton Street (14A), Loma Linda, CA, 92357; e-mail: <john.byrne{at}med.va.gov>
  • Received 18 April 2008
  • Accepted 4 December 2008

Abstract

The authors implemented what is possibly the first secure messaging system in a VA Medical Center. Since reimbursement for secure messaging is not of great concern and clinical data systems are fully computerized, several evaluation strategies were used to assess clinical adoption. To address known concerns of clinicians, the authors analyzed secure messaging use and performed a content analysis. Message volumes were low and content analysis demonstrated that messages were appropriate. Despite this, a clinician survey showed that clinical adoption was impeded by several factors including the introduction of secure messaging to selected patients, workload concerns, and clinician communication preferences. In addition, the authors believe that clinicians experienced clinical adoption inertia resulting from the overload of information in a highly computerized clinical environment. The authors learned that to promote clinician adoption they must demonstrate workload benefits from secure messaging and more fully analyze the clinical computing workload that clinicians experience.

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