Times are displayed in (UTC-07:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) Change
5/22/2025 |
8:00 AM – 9:00 AM |
San Simeon A/B
S24: Informatics & Patient-Centered Care
Presentation Type: Oral Presentations
Designing an Electronic Patient Reported Outcomes Information Architecture Reinforced by the RE-AIM Implementation Framework
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference On Demand
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference 25x5 Presentation
Presentation Time: 08:00 AM - 08:15 AM
Abstract Keywords: Patient-Generated Data / Patient Reported Outcomes (PROs), Workflow Efficiency, EHR Implementation and Optimization, Data Visualization, Documentation Burden
Primary Track: Documentation Burden, Clinician Well-Being and Care Outcomes
Programmatic Theme: Usability, Efficiency, and User Experience
To improve patient care using patient-reported outcomes (PROs), we developed an electronic health record (EHR)-integrated PRO framework based on RE-AIM principles. Using Epic Systems, we implemented the MDASI-HN questionnaire in radiation oncology, achieving 13,156 submissions with 82% compliance over 12 months. Our implementation-evaluation model supports adaptive, scalable ePRO tools for key stakeholders (patients, staff, facilitators), enhances clinical decision-making by optimizing PRO visualizations and functions, and enables continuous evaluation to detect and address implementation barriers.
Speaker:
Amy Moreno, MD
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Authors:
Amy Moreno, MD - The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center; Clifton Fuller, MD, PhD - University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center;
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference On Demand
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference 25x5 Presentation
Presentation Time: 08:00 AM - 08:15 AM
Abstract Keywords: Patient-Generated Data / Patient Reported Outcomes (PROs), Workflow Efficiency, EHR Implementation and Optimization, Data Visualization, Documentation Burden
Primary Track: Documentation Burden, Clinician Well-Being and Care Outcomes
Programmatic Theme: Usability, Efficiency, and User Experience
To improve patient care using patient-reported outcomes (PROs), we developed an electronic health record (EHR)-integrated PRO framework based on RE-AIM principles. Using Epic Systems, we implemented the MDASI-HN questionnaire in radiation oncology, achieving 13,156 submissions with 82% compliance over 12 months. Our implementation-evaluation model supports adaptive, scalable ePRO tools for key stakeholders (patients, staff, facilitators), enhances clinical decision-making by optimizing PRO visualizations and functions, and enables continuous evaluation to detect and address implementation barriers.
Speaker:
Amy Moreno, MD
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Authors:
Amy Moreno, MD - The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center; Clifton Fuller, MD, PhD - University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center;
Testing a free, fast, and secure method for routing public transit from patient address to the point of care
Click to View Presentation
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference On Demand
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference DEI/Health Equity Presentation
Presentation Time: 08:15 AM - 08:30 AM
Abstract Keywords: Social Determinants of Health, Population Health, Data Visualization
Primary Track: Documentation Burden, Clinician Well-Being and Care Outcomes
Programmatic Theme: Emerging Technology and Technical Infrastructure
Despite the importance of understanding transportation barriers, there is no tool integrated with the electronic health record providing timely and granular information about public transportation accessibility during clinical encounters or for research. Therefore, a framework for a public transit routing system comprised of free, publicly available data and software sources that are offline to protect patient data was created and implemented, mapping 440,000 routes from home address to University of Maryland Medical Center.
Speaker:
Sinan Aktay, B.S.
University of Maryland School of Medicine
Authors:
Samia Menon, BS - Columbia University; Ozan Aktay, BS - University of Maryland - College Park; Shuo Huang, PhD - University of Maryland Institute for Health Computing; Rozalina McCoy, MD MS - University of Maryland School of Medicine;
Click to View Presentation
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference On Demand
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference DEI/Health Equity Presentation
Presentation Time: 08:15 AM - 08:30 AM
Abstract Keywords: Social Determinants of Health, Population Health, Data Visualization
Primary Track: Documentation Burden, Clinician Well-Being and Care Outcomes
Programmatic Theme: Emerging Technology and Technical Infrastructure
Despite the importance of understanding transportation barriers, there is no tool integrated with the electronic health record providing timely and granular information about public transportation accessibility during clinical encounters or for research. Therefore, a framework for a public transit routing system comprised of free, publicly available data and software sources that are offline to protect patient data was created and implemented, mapping 440,000 routes from home address to University of Maryland Medical Center.
Speaker:
Sinan Aktay, B.S.
University of Maryland School of Medicine
Authors:
Samia Menon, BS - Columbia University; Ozan Aktay, BS - University of Maryland - College Park; Shuo Huang, PhD - University of Maryland Institute for Health Computing; Rozalina McCoy, MD MS - University of Maryland School of Medicine;
Improving Vaccine Confidence: Usability Testing of a Caregiver-Centric mHealth App
Click to View Presentation
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference On Demand
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference DEI/Health Equity Presentation
Presentation Time: 08:30 AM - 08:45 AM
Abstract Keywords: Usability and Measuring User Experience, Telemedicine and Telehealth including mHealth, App’s etc, Consumer and Patient Engagement
Primary Track: Documentation Burden, Clinician Well-Being and Care Outcomes
Programmatic Theme: Usability, Efficiency, and User Experience
This study evaluates a beta version of a mHealth app designed to support vaccination confidence among caregivers regarding well-child checks in the first year of life. Feedback on the alpha version was gathered from rural and urban community advisory boards resulting in a beta version tested with English- and Spanish-speaking caregivers. Results indicate high app usefulness, trust, and accessible content. Key usability issues highlighted a need for improved navigation, content clarity, and functionality.
Speaker:
Elizabeth Reisher, MS
University of Nebraska Medical Center
Authors:
Carlos Eduardo Rangel Martinez, MD, MPH - University of Nebraska Medical Center; Martina Clarke, PhD - University of Nebraska-Omaha; Ellen Kerns, PhD, MPH - UNMC;
Click to View Presentation
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference On Demand
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference DEI/Health Equity Presentation
Presentation Time: 08:30 AM - 08:45 AM
Abstract Keywords: Usability and Measuring User Experience, Telemedicine and Telehealth including mHealth, App’s etc, Consumer and Patient Engagement
Primary Track: Documentation Burden, Clinician Well-Being and Care Outcomes
Programmatic Theme: Usability, Efficiency, and User Experience
This study evaluates a beta version of a mHealth app designed to support vaccination confidence among caregivers regarding well-child checks in the first year of life. Feedback on the alpha version was gathered from rural and urban community advisory boards resulting in a beta version tested with English- and Spanish-speaking caregivers. Results indicate high app usefulness, trust, and accessible content. Key usability issues highlighted a need for improved navigation, content clarity, and functionality.
Speaker:
Elizabeth Reisher, MS
University of Nebraska Medical Center
Authors:
Carlos Eduardo Rangel Martinez, MD, MPH - University of Nebraska Medical Center; Martina Clarke, PhD - University of Nebraska-Omaha; Ellen Kerns, PhD, MPH - UNMC;
Refresh, Refresh, Refresh: Association of Repeated Access to the Patient Portal Awaiting Test Results with Patient Messaging
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference On Demand
Presentation Time: 08:45 AM - 09:00 AM
Abstract Keywords: 21st Century Cures (including considerations for special populations such as adolescents), Big Data, Consumer and Patient Engagement, Usability and Measuring User Experience
Primary Track: Documentation Burden, Clinician Well-Being and Care Outcomes
Programmatic Theme: Usability, Efficiency, and User Experience
Many patients report heightened worry while awaiting test results in the patient portal. Identifying patients who exhibit behaviors associated with worry while waiting for results could allow health systems to proactively support patients and reduce message volumes. We used portal access logs to study “refresh” behavior, where patients repeatedly access the portal while awaiting new test results. We identified characteristics of patients who refresh for results and measured the association between refreshing and subsequent messaging.
Speaker:
Bryan Steitz, PhD
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Authors:
Robert Turer, MD, MSE - UT Southwestern Medical Center; Liz Salmi - Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Uday Suresh, MS - Vanderbilt University Department of Biomedical Informatics; Scott MacDonald, MD - UC Davis Health System; Catherine DesRoches, DrPH - OpenNotes, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Adam Wright, PhD - Vanderbilt University Medical Center; Jeremy Louissaint, M.D. - University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center; S. Trent Rosenbloom, MD, MPH, FACMI, FAMIA - Vanderbilt University Medical Center Dept of Biomedical Informatics;
2025 Clinical Informatics Conference On Demand
Presentation Time: 08:45 AM - 09:00 AM
Abstract Keywords: 21st Century Cures (including considerations for special populations such as adolescents), Big Data, Consumer and Patient Engagement, Usability and Measuring User Experience
Primary Track: Documentation Burden, Clinician Well-Being and Care Outcomes
Programmatic Theme: Usability, Efficiency, and User Experience
Many patients report heightened worry while awaiting test results in the patient portal. Identifying patients who exhibit behaviors associated with worry while waiting for results could allow health systems to proactively support patients and reduce message volumes. We used portal access logs to study “refresh” behavior, where patients repeatedly access the portal while awaiting new test results. We identified characteristics of patients who refresh for results and measured the association between refreshing and subsequent messaging.
Speaker:
Bryan Steitz, PhD
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Authors:
Robert Turer, MD, MSE - UT Southwestern Medical Center; Liz Salmi - Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Uday Suresh, MS - Vanderbilt University Department of Biomedical Informatics; Scott MacDonald, MD - UC Davis Health System; Catherine DesRoches, DrPH - OpenNotes, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Adam Wright, PhD - Vanderbilt University Medical Center; Jeremy Louissaint, M.D. - University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center; S. Trent Rosenbloom, MD, MPH, FACMI, FAMIA - Vanderbilt University Medical Center Dept of Biomedical Informatics;