Secure Messaging Through PositiveLinks: Examination of Electronic Communication in a Clinic-Affiliated Smartphone App for Patients Living with HIV

Tabor E Flickinger, Karen Ingersoll, Sabrina Swoger, Marika Grabowski, Rebecca Dillingham, Tabor E Flickinger, Karen Ingersoll, Sabrina Swoger, Marika Grabowski, Rebecca Dillingham

Abstract

Purpose: Secure messaging between patients and their health care team can facilitate chronic care management. PositiveLinks® (PL) is a clinic-affiliated smartphone application designed for patients living with HIV that includes a secure messaging feature for patients, PL staff, and clinic providers to communicate. Our aim was to examine the content and function of messaging within PL. Methodology: We examined messages exchanged through PL from November 2017 through January 2018. Qualitative analysis included categorization of topics as: related to the app, medical care, or social needs. Messaging functions were categorized as information exchange or rapport building. Results: Of the 1,474 PL messages analyzed, 44% were sent by PL staff, 38% by patients, and 18% by providers, whereas 61% were received by patients, 22% by providers, and 17% by PL staff. Message topics included app-related (57.6%), medical care (34.3%), and social concerns (12.4%). App-related messages addressed technical difficulties, software updates, or coordinating phone payments. Medical messages included medical information, medications, appointments, outreach, and care coordination for physical and mental health. Social messages related to insurance, transportation, housing, food, utilities, disability, finances, and work absences. Message function coding showed that 87.3% of messages contained information exchange and 33.8% contained rapport building. Messages sent by providers were most likely to contain rapport building at 54.8%. Conclusion: PL messaging was used to handle medical and social needs with potential impact on patients' health and offers an opportunity to strengthen patient-provider relationships through responsiveness and rapport building. Secure messaging through a clinic-affiliated smartphone app could enhance patient-centered care between clinical visits.

Keywords: HIV/AIDS; PositiveLinks; mobile health; patient–provider communication; smartphone app; telemedicine.

Conflict of interest statement

Drs. Ingersoll and Dillingham provide consulting services to Warm Health Technologies, Inc., a mobile health company. None of the other authors have any conflicts of interest.

Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Topic and function code frequencies.
Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.
Screenshots of de-identified conversations between patients, PositiveLinks® staff, and clinic providers regarding app-related issues, medical care, and social needs.

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Source: PubMed

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