Factors Influencing Adherence to Non-Invasive Telemedicine in Heart Failure: A Systematic Review.

IF 1.7 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
George Koulaouzidis, Lamprini Tsigkriki, Orestis Grammenos, Sotiria Iliopoulou, Maria Kalaitzoglou, Panagiotis Theodorou, Ioannis Bostanitis, Karolina Skonieczna-Żydecka, Dafni Charisopoulou
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Abstract

Background/Objectives: Telemedicine (TM) has emerged as a promising tool for improving heart failure (HF) management by allowing non-invasive, remote patient monitoring. However, patient adherence to TM plays a critical role in its effectiveness. This systematic review aims to assess adherence levels to non-invasive TM interventions and explore factors influencing compliance. Methods: This systematic review followed the PRISMA guidelines. A literature search was conducted across the PubMed, Medline, Web of Science, and Google Scholar databases to identify prospective randomized controlled trials published between January 2010 and June 2024. The inclusion criteria included studies focused on non-invasive TM in HF patients with a follow-up period longer than three months. Adherence rates were categorized as high (≥80%), moderate (60-79%), or low (<60%). Results: Of the 136 identified studies, 6 met the inclusion criteria. Three studies reported high adherence (>80%), and three moderate adherence (60-79%). Older patients (≥65 years) showed higher adherence, with two studies exceeding 85% adherence. Studies with higher female participation (>30%) reported better adherence, with two exceeding 88%. Across studies, a lack of racial diversity was especially notable, apart from a study that included a population with 69% black and 31% Hispanic participants, where adherence was 50% for ≥10 uploads over a 90-day period. Seasonal variations affected adherence, with December being the lowest (47-69%) and August the highest (>85%). Monitoring multiple health parameters correlated with better adherence (>85%) compared to single-parameter tracking (50-74%). Conclusions: TM is a promising tool for HF management, but adherence differs by age, sex, and the complexity of monitoring. To optimize TM use, standardized adherence measures and tailored strategies are needed.

影响心力衰竭患者坚持非侵入性远程医疗的因素:一项系统综述。
背景/目的:远程医疗(TM)已成为改善心力衰竭(HF)管理的一种有前途的工具,它允许非侵入性的远程患者监测。然而,患者对TM的坚持在其有效性中起着关键作用。本系统综述旨在评估非侵入性TM干预的依从性水平,并探讨影响依从性的因素。方法:本系统评价遵循PRISMA指南。对PubMed、Medline、Web of Science和b谷歌Scholar数据库进行文献检索,以确定2010年1月至2024年6月间发表的前瞻性随机对照试验。纳入标准包括随访时间超过3个月的HF患者的非侵入性TM研究。依从率分为高(≥80%)、中(60-79%)和低(结果:在136项确定的研究中,6项符合纳入标准)。三项研究报告了高依从性(bbb80 %)和中度依从性(60-79%)。老年患者(≥65岁)表现出更高的依从性,有两项研究的依从性超过85%。女性参与较多的研究(bbb30 %)报告了更好的依从性,其中两项超过88%。在所有研究中,种族多样性的缺乏尤其明显,除了一项研究,其中包括69%的黑人和31%的西班牙裔参与者,其中在90天内上传≥10次的依从性为50%。季节变化影响依从性,12月最低(47% -69%),8月最高(50% - 85%)。与单参数跟踪(50-74%)相比,监测多个健康参数与更好的依从性相关(bb0 - 85%)。结论:TM是一种很有前景的心衰治疗工具,但依从性因年龄、性别和监测复杂性而异。为了优化TM的使用,需要标准化的依从性措施和量身定制的策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Clinics and Practice
Clinics and Practice MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
4.30%
发文量
91
审稿时长
10 weeks
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