RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 A Pilot Comparison of Clinical Data Collection Methods Using Paper, Electronic Health Record Prompt, and a Smartphone Application JF The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine JO J Am Board Fam Med FD American Board of Family Medicine SP 46 OP 55 DO 10.3122/jabfm.2024.240199R1 VO 38 IS 1 A1 Stabler, Meagan E. A1 Westfall, John M. A1 Nease, Donald E. A1 Raymond, Jennifer A1 Jobse, Bruce A1 Daudier, Zoe A1 Emanuele, Laurie A1 Wilson, Elisabeth A1 Boardman, Maureen A1 Korsen, Neil A1 MacLean, Charles D. A1 van Eeghen, Constance A1 Hudon, Paula S. A1 Burdick, Timothy E. YR 2025 UL http://www.jabfm.org/content/38/1/46.abstract AB Background: For decades, researchers have utilized paper card studies to assess primary care clinician (PCC) perceptions across various clinical and practice topics. Since 2022, cards can be completed electronically through the electronic health record (EHR) or a novel smartphone application (app). These delivery modalities have not previously been evaluated head-to-head. We report findings from a work in progress comparing paper, EHR, and app-delivered cards.Methods: The Northern New England CO-OP Practice and Community Based Research Network recruited 15 PCCs from 3 clinics to collect a total of 324 cards from unique patient visits over 4 clinical days per PCC on the topic of “telehealth burden.” Each clinic utilized a different data collection modality and collected approximately 100 cards. After completing the cards, we surveyed PCCs about their user experience. Our primary outcomes were PCC experience, card completion rates, and total cost of using the cards.Results: PCCs reported that data collection was easy and the card study did not disrupt clinical operations regardless of modality. Paper cards had the highest completion rate and were least expensive for a small-scale card study, but were most expensive when scaled due to the large amount of time to transcribe data manually. EHR was the most expensive modality for a small-scale card study, but EHR and app cards scaled better than paper.Conclusions: While each modality has distinct advantages and disadvantages, all 3 card study data collection methods were acceptable to PCCs and obtained a high response rate.