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The Role of Framing and Choice Architecture in Patients' Reactions and Electronic Health Records' Error Discovery and Reporting
The first goal of our research is to understand the effects of different wordings of certain messages on patients' engagement in reviewing their electronic health records (EHRs). These messages will be about EHR errors and their potential consequences, as well as the benefits that might accrue from reviewing EHRs. The second goal is to understand the effects of different wordings of certain messages on patients' discovery and reporting of potential errors in their electronic health records (EHRs). The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Does focusing on the negative OR positive consequences of EHR errors in the investigator's messages to people, increase their likelihood of reviewing their EHRs? 2. Does focusing on the negative OR positive consequences of EHR errors in the investigators' messages to people, increase their likelihood of discovery and reporting of potential errors in their EHRs? First, participants will take an initial short online survey (for about 5 minutes). Next, participants will be asked to log into their patient portal and review their EHRs, a process that should take around 10 minutes. Finally, they will proceed with the same survey for an additional 5 minutes, providing responses about their healthcare provider, patient portals, EHR errors, and some basic demographic details.
This study involves an online experiment aimed at assessing patient engagement in discovering and reporting errors in Electronic Health Records (EHRs). It is being conducted by Dr. Ryan Raimi from the Information Systems Area at The University of Texas at Dallas, in collaboration with Dr. Idris Adjerid from the Business Information Technology Department at Virginia Tech, along with Dr. Anish K. Agarwal and Dr. Raina M. Merchant from the Emergency Medicine Department at the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. The research involves no deception and presents no more than minimal risk to participants, similar to the risks encountered in everyday life. Participation typically takes no more than 20 minutes and is completely confidential. To begin, participants will voluntarily consent to take part in the study. If participants agree to participate, the study process will involve the following steps: Survey Participation: Initially, participants will complete a short survey lasting about 5 minutes, where participants will answer questions about trust, distrust, and privacy concerns. EHR Review: Next, participants will be instructed to access their patient portal and review their EHRs, which will take approximately 10 minutes. Final Survey: Afterward, participants will continue the same survey for another 5 minutes, answering questions about their healthcare provider, patient portals, EHR errors, and some basic demographic information. All responses are kept confidential, and no individual participant data will be identified. The data will be aggregated and published in a summary form only. Although the study is hosted on a secure https server, there is a minimal risk of unauthorized access (e.g., by hackers). Participants' Prolific IDs will not be linked to participants' survey responses, and the investigators will not access any personally identifying information on participants' Prolific Academic profiles. Participation is voluntary, and choosing not to participate will not affect participants' rights or benefits. Participants may withdraw from the study at any time without penalty or loss of benefits.
Age
18 - 99 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Naveen Jindal School of Management, The University of Texas at Dallas
Richardson, Texas, United States
Start Date
November 26, 2025
Primary Completion Date
April 30, 2026
Completion Date
May 10, 2026
Last Updated
March 13, 2026
3,000
ESTIMATED participants
Framing
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
The University of Texas at Dallas
Collaborators
NCT05439265
NCT04322786
Data Source & Attribution
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