Developing a framework to generate evidence of health outcomes from social media use in chronic disease management.

Medicine 2.0 Pub Date : 2013-08-08 eCollection Date: 2013-07-01 DOI:10.2196/med20.2717
Mark Merolli, Kathleen Gray, Fernando Martin-Sanchez
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引用次数: 28

Abstract

Background: While there is an abundance of evidence-based practice (EBP) recommendations guiding management of various chronic diseases, evidence suggesting best practice for using social media to improve health outcomes is inadequate. The variety of social media platforms, multiple potential uses, inconsistent definitions, and paucity of rigorous studies, make it difficult to measure health outcomes reliably in chronic disease management. Most published investigations report on an earlier generation of online tools, which are not as user-centered, participatory, engaging, or collaborative, and thus may work differently for health self-management.

Objective: The challenge to establish a sound evidence base for social media use in chronic disease starts with the need to define criteria and methods to generate and evaluate evidence. The authors' key objective is to develop a framework for research and practice that addresses this challenge.

Methods: This paper forms part of a larger research project that presents a conceptual framework of how evidence of health outcomes can be generated from social media use, allowing social media to be utilized in chronic disease management more effectively. Using mixed methods incorporating a qualitative literature review, a survey and a pilot intervention, the research closely examines the therapeutic affordances of social media, people with chronic pain (PWCP) as a subset of chronic disease management, valid outcome measurement of patient-reported (health) outcomes (PRO), the individual needs of people living with chronic disease, and finally translation of the combined results to improve evidence-based decision making about social media use in this context.

Results: Extensive review highlights various affordances of social media that may prove valuable to understanding social media's effect on individual health outcomes. However, without standardized PRO instruments, we are unable to definitively investigate these effects. The proposed framework that we offer outlines how therapeutic affordances of social media coupled with valid and reliable PRO measurement may be used to generate evidence of improvements in health outcomes, as well as guide evidence-based decision making in the future about social media use as part of chronic disease self-management.

Conclusions: The results will (1) inform a framework for conducting research into health outcomes from social media use in chronic disease, as well as support translating the findings into evidence of improved health outcomes, and (2) inform a set of recommendations for evidence-based decision making about social media use as part of chronic disease self-management. These outcomes will fill a gap in the knowledge and resources available to individuals managing a chronic disease, their clinicians and other researchers in chronic disease and the field of medicine 2.0.

Abstract Image

制定框架,为慢性病管理中使用社交媒体产生的健康结果提供证据。
背景:虽然有大量的循证实践(EBP)建议指导各种慢性疾病的管理,但表明使用社交媒体改善健康结果的最佳实践的证据不足。社交媒体平台的多样性、多种潜在用途、不一致的定义以及缺乏严格的研究,使得在慢性疾病管理中难以可靠地衡量健康结果。大多数已发表的调查报告都是关于较早一代的在线工具,这些工具不以用户为中心、参与性、参与性或协作性,因此在健康自我管理方面可能发挥不同的作用。目的:为慢性病中社交媒体的使用建立健全的证据基础的挑战始于需要确定产生和评估证据的标准和方法。作者的主要目标是为解决这一挑战的研究和实践开发一个框架。方法:本文是一个更大的研究项目的一部分,该项目提出了一个概念框架,即如何从社交媒体的使用中产生健康结果的证据,从而使社交媒体更有效地用于慢性病管理。该研究采用定性文献综述、调查和试点干预相结合的混合方法,仔细检查了社交媒体的治疗能力、慢性疼痛患者(PWCP)作为慢性疾病管理的一个子集、患者报告(健康)结果(PRO)的有效结果测量、慢性疾病患者的个人需求、最后,对综合结果进行翻译,以提高在这种情况下关于社交媒体使用的循证决策。结果:广泛的回顾强调了社交媒体的各种功能,这些功能可能对理解社交媒体对个人健康结果的影响有价值。然而,没有标准化的PRO仪器,我们无法明确地调查这些影响。我们提出的框架概述了如何使用社交媒体的治疗能力与有效可靠的PRO测量相结合,以产生改善健康结果的证据,并指导未来将社交媒体使用作为慢性病自我管理的一部分的循证决策。结论:研究结果将(1)为慢性病患者使用社交媒体的健康结果研究框架提供信息,并支持将研究结果转化为改善健康结果的证据;(2)为将社交媒体使用作为慢性病自我管理一部分的循证决策提供一套建议。这些成果将填补个人、临床医生和其他慢性病研究人员以及医学2.0领域可用知识和资源的空白。
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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