Journal of Diabetes Research (Jan 2017)

The Next Frontier in Communication and the ECLIPPSE Study: Bridging the Linguistic Divide in Secure Messaging

  • Dean Schillinger,
  • Danielle McNamara,
  • Scott Crossley,
  • Courtney Lyles,
  • Howard H. Moffet,
  • Urmimala Sarkar,
  • Nicholas Duran,
  • Jill Allen,
  • Jennifer Liu,
  • Danielle Oryn,
  • Neda Ratanawongsa,
  • Andrew J. Karter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/1348242
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2017

Abstract

Read online

Health systems are heavily promoting patient portals. However, limited health literacy (HL) can restrict online communication via secure messaging (SM) because patients’ literacy skills must be sufficient to convey and comprehend content while clinicians must encourage and elicit communication from patients and match patients’ literacy level. This paper describes the Employing Computational Linguistics to Improve Patient-Provider Secure Email (ECLIPPSE) study, an interdisciplinary effort bringing together scientists in communication, computational linguistics, and health services to employ computational linguistic methods to (1) create a novel Linguistic Complexity Profile (LCP) to characterize communications of patients and clinicians and demonstrate its validity and (2) examine whether providers accommodate communication needs of patients with limited HL by tailoring their SM responses. We will study >5 million SMs generated by >150,000 ethnically diverse type 2 diabetes patients and >9000 clinicians from two settings: an integrated delivery system and a public (safety net) system. Finally, we will then create an LCP-based automated aid that delivers real-time feedback to clinicians to reduce the linguistic complexity of their SMs. This research will support health systems’ journeys to become health literate healthcare organizations and reduce HL-related disparities in diabetes care.