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The Quadruple Aim
Quadruple Aim

A Conceptual Framework

Improving the U.S. health care system requires four aims: improving the experience of care, improving the health of populations, reducing per capita costs and improving care team well-being. HITEQ Center resources seek to provide content and direction aligned with the goals of the Quadruple Aim

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Resource Overview

There has never been a time in which community health centers have had greater opportunities to reach out and engage with a patient population that could greatly benefit from continuous engagement and communication. Electronic patient engagement tools such as patient portals, health apps, text messaging services and other social networking technologies have ushered in a more sustainable and varied number of channels of activation and engagement. On top of this, the price of mobile communication technologies has decreased enough to the point where it is affordable even within underserved populations. Despite these opportunities, the challenge remains considerable due to a variety of socio-economics issues that have traditionally limited the ability to sustain care to underserved populations.

The challenge before health centers now is to leverage these new messaging channels effectively and safely without overly increasing the burden of adoption for their patients. Within this guide a framework has been developed for bridging the gap between the promise of electronic engagement and the special conditions of the community health center setting. The guide provided below builds off the framework first outlined in the article "A Multidimensional View of Personal Health Systems for Underserved Populations". This new and updated guide addresses the new technologies, policies, and organizational challenges that health centers are dealing with and provides strategies for effective adoption and decision support tools for determing best methods of deployment.

Electronic Patient Engagement Evaluation Framework

HITEQ Health App Decision Tree

HITEQ Health App Decision Tree

A tool developed In collaboration with the Children's Health Fund to help choose appropriate Health Apps

There are thousands of consumer health applications (health apps), which run on smartphones, watches, tablets, and other mobile devices. These health apps are available for download for general consumers, patients, and healthcare professionals. Currently, there is no governmental agency that provides certification or guidance on health apps, although there are several projects from organizations such as HL7, the FDA, ONC, and OCR that are working to provide guidance. User discrepancy in terms of the validity and safety of the health apps they choose to use are primarily based on ratings or recommendations. This guide seeks to provide a health app decision tree that can assist medical professionals and consumers in making wise choices when using health apps.

The Children's Health Fund was made aware of a use case in which a health app that was targeted for use by adults was used for a child and consequently caused a detrimental health issue. Currently there are no certifying bodies for consumer-oriented health apps and consequently many doctors must navigate this domain themselves. This guide seeks to provide a health app decision tree that can assist medical professionals and consumers in making wise choices when using health apps.

Download the decision tree below.

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29851
Intended Audiencephysicians, pediatricians, healthcare providers, consumers, parents, patients

Documents to download

  • Health App Decision Tree(.pdf, 452.51 KB) - 1085 download(s)

    Download this tool to use for provider/ patient conversations to select appropriate health apps or to assess those currently in use.

Acknowledgements

This resource collection was cultivated and developed by Thomas A. Horan, PhD, Dean of the School of Business at the University of Redlands, California and the HITEQ team with valuable suggestions and contributions from HITEQ Project collaborators.

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