面向即将进入大学的新兴成年人的移动哮喘应用程序:范围审查

V. Ann Andreoni , Margaret C. Delaney , Susan McNamee , Elizabeth Huggins , Barbara Velsor-Friedrich
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景有限的数据存在指导循证哮喘自我保健的新成人,因为他们从儿科过渡到成人医疗保健。除了通常的父母和医疗支持系统之外,这种转变经常发生在大学环境中。鉴于哮喘的慢性、发作性,新生成人必须有基本的工具来维持疾病控制。目的对17 - 25岁大学生哮喘自我护理和管理的手机应用程序进行范围综述。结果分析了2015年至2023年间发表的同行评议期刊上的研究(n = 456)。由于搜索结果显示没有发表的文章符合年龄和教育程度的纳入标准,因此修改了标准,取消了对大学入学的要求。六篇已发表的文章评估了3个不同的哮喘应用程序,这些应用程序具有相似的年龄范围,但没有相同的教育过渡需求。回顾的研究表明,应用程序的使用对参与者有积极的影响,包括方便的信息访问和改善疾病知识,症状控制和/或症状自我管理。局限性包括样本量小,参与者年龄变化,以及缺乏对初出期成人特定需求的研究。样本量小,由于自我报告可变性而产生的潜在偏差,以及弱势群体中手机可用性的固有偏差,限制了普遍性。结论移动哮喘app可以促进新兴成人人群的过渡性护理。尽管这一范围审查表明应用程序的使用改善了健康状况,但仍有必要对即将进入大学的哮喘新成人进行进一步研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mobile asthma apps for emerging adults transitioning to college: A scoping review

Background

Limited data exists to direct evidence-based asthma self-care for emerging adults as they transition from pediatric to adult health care. This transition often occurs in the college setting, apart from usual parental and health care support systems. Given the chronic, episodic nature of asthma, it is imperative that emerging adults have essential tools to maintain disease control.

Objective

A scoping review was conducted to discover if mobile applications (apps) for asthma self-care and management exist for college students between 17 and 25 years of age.

Results

Research studies (n = 456) from peer-reviewed journals published between 2015 and 2023 were analyzed. As the search revealed no published articles that met the inclusion criteria for age and educational status, the criteria were revised to eliminate the requirement for college enrollment. Six published articles evaluating 3 separate asthma apps with similar age ranges were identified but without the same educational transition needs.

Discussion

The studies reviewed suggested that app use had a positive effect on participants, including ease of information access and improved disease knowledge, symptom control, and/or symptom self-management. Limitations included small sample sizes, participant age variability, and lack of studies on needs specific to emerging adults. Small sample sizes, potential bias due to self-report variability, and inherent bias in cell phone availability in disadvantaged populations limit generalizability.

Conclusion

Mobile asthma apps can facilitate transitional care in the emerging adult population. Although this scoping review suggests improved health outcomes with app use, there remains a need for future research on emerging adults with asthma transitioning to college.
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