创新,技术驱动,管理儿童尿失禁的数字工具:范围审查。

IF 1.9 Q3 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Lola Bladt, Jiri Vermeulen, Alexandra Vermandel, Gunter De Win, Lukas Van Campenhout
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:尿失禁在白天影响约7%至10%的儿童,在夜间影响9%至12%的儿童。治疗主要包括生活方式建议和行为方法,但动机和坚持度很低。纸笔解决方案等传统工具可能会过时,不再满足当今“数字原生代”儿童的需求。与此同时,数字干预措施已经在其他儿科保健领域显示出有效性。目的:本综述旨在识别和绘制创新的、技术驱动的、数字化的儿童尿失禁管理工具。方法:检索PubMed、Web of Science和Cochrane Library,检索时间为2022年3月,无日期限制,并辅以交叉参考。如果研究集中于患有膀胱和肠道功能障碍的儿科患者(年龄≤18岁),并探索无创、基于技术的干预措施,如数字健康、远程监测和游戏化,则研究符合条件。排除了对成人、侵入性治疗和没有有形工具的常规方法的研究。灰色文献被考虑,但非英语、难以获取或缺乏结果的文章被排除在外。没有进行正式的批判性评价,因为重点是绘制现有工具的地图,而不是评价有效性。数据分析结合了描述性统计和定性内容分析,通过迭代编码和团队讨论对工具进行分类。结果:共纳入66篇文献,其中近1/ 3(21/ 66,32 %)集中于夜间遗尿。我们的分析确定了六大工具类别:(1)数字自我管理(7/66,11%);(2)严肃游戏(7/66,11%);(3)提醒技术(6/ 66,9 %);(4)教育媒体(12/66,18%),再细分为视频(5/12,42%)和其他媒体(7/12,58%);(5)远程保健和远程患者监护(13/66,20%),通信(5/13,38%)和技术进步(8/13,62%)的子类别;(6)遗尿报警创新(21/66,32%),进一步分为新型配置(8/21,38%)和预防报警(13/21,62%)。结论:儿童尿失禁领域显示出相当大的创新水平,纳入66项研究证明了这一点。本综述中确定的许多工具被描述为传统方法的有前途和可行的替代方法。据报道,这些工具增强了参与度,改善了合规性,提高了患者的满意度和偏好,同时也有可能为医疗保健提供者节省时间。然而,本综述也发现了研究中的空白,强调需要更严格的研究来更好地评估这些工具的有效性,并解决儿科尿失禁管理中复杂的、多方面的挑战。本综述的局限性包括:将检索限制在3个数据库中,不包括非英语文章,范围广,单一审稿人筛选,尽管频繁的团队讨论确保了严谨性。我们建议,未来的工具应该在多学科、以人为中心的框架指导下,结合定性和定量见解,结合利益相关者的需求,整合互联的、自适应的和个性化的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Innovative, Technology-Driven, Digital Tools for Managing Pediatric Urinary Incontinence: Scoping Review.

Background: Urinary incontinence affects approximately 7% to 10% of children during the day and 9% to 12% of children during the night. Treatment mainly involves lifestyle advice and behavioral methods, but motivation and adherence are low. Traditional tools such as pen-and-paper solutions may feel outdated and no longer meet the needs of today's "digital native" children. Meanwhile, digital interventions have already shown effectiveness in other pediatric health care areas.

Objective: This scoping review aimed to identify and map innovative, technology-driven, digital tools for managing pediatric urinary incontinence.

Methods: PubMed, Web of Science, and the Cochrane Library were searched in March 2022 without date restrictions, complemented by cross-referencing. Studies were eligible if they focused on pediatric patients (aged ≤18 years) with bladder and bowel dysfunctions and explored noninvasive, technology-based interventions such as digital health, remote monitoring, and gamification. Studies on adults, invasive treatments, and conventional methods without tangible tools were excluded. Gray literature was considered, but non-English-language, inaccessible, or result-lacking articles were excluded. A formal critical appraisal was not conducted as the focus was on mapping existing tools rather than evaluating effectiveness. Data analysis combined descriptive statistics and qualitative content analysis, categorizing tools through iterative coding and team discussions.

Results: In total, 66 articles were included, with nearly one-third (21/66, 32%) focusing on nocturnal enuresis. Our analysis led to the identification of six main categories of tools: (1) digital self-management (7/66, 11%); (2) serious games (7/66, 11%); (3) reminder technology (6/66, 9%); (4) educational media (12/66, 18%), further divided into video (5/12, 42%) and other media (7/12, 58%); (5) telehealth and remote patient monitoring (13/66, 20%), with subcategories of communication (5/13, 38%) and technological advances (8/13, 62%); and (6) enuresis alarm innovations (21/66, 32%), further divided into novel configurations (8/21, 38%) and prevoid alarms (13/21, 62%).

Conclusions: The field of pediatric urinary incontinence demonstrates a considerable level of innovation, as evidenced by the inclusion of 66 studies. Many tools identified in this review were described as promising and feasible alternatives to traditional methods. These tools were reported to enhance engagement, improve compliance, and increase patient satisfaction and preference while also having the potential to save time for health care providers. However, this review also identified gaps in research, highlighting the need for more rigorous research to better assess the tools' effectiveness and address the complex, multifaceted challenges of pediatric urinary incontinence management. Limitations of this review include restricting the search to 3 databases, excluding non-English-language articles, the broad scope, and single-reviewer screening, although frequent team discussions ensured rigor. We propose that future tools should integrate connected, adaptive, and personalized approaches that align with stakeholder needs, guided by a multidisciplinary, human-centered framework combining both qualitative and quantitative insights.

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来源期刊
Interactive Journal of Medical Research
Interactive Journal of Medical Research MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL-
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审稿时长
12 weeks
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