COVID-19大流行期间用于非传染性疾病管理的数字卫生创新:快速范围审查

IF 1.4 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Shruti Murthy, P. Kamath, Myron Anthony Godinho, Nachiket Gudi, A. Jacob, Oommen John
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引用次数: 6

摘要

目的识别和总结COVID-19非传染性疾病(NCD)管理中实施的数字健康干预措施(DHIs)。快速范围审查。三位审稿人共同筛选标题摘要和全文。一位审稿人筛选了所有被排除的记录。将数据映射到世卫组织健康指数分类并进行叙述性总结。数据来源:PubMed, CENTRAL, CINAHL, EMBASE。2019年11月1日至2021年9月19日期间发表的关于COVID-19大流行期间DHI用于非传染性疾病管理的同行评议初步研究。综述、社论、信件、评论、意见、会议摘要和灰色文献被排除在外。结果共纳入5275份文献中的83项研究。大多数研究在设计上都是定量的。40%的发展中国家发展倡议是在美洲实施的。近一半的DHIs针对的是精神健康问题。大多数干预措施是通过电话远程提供的。Zoom(26.5%)、email(17%)和WhatsApp(7.5%)是医疗服务的三大平台。远程医疗、有针对性的客户干预、个人健康跟踪和客户按需信息服务是最常实施的干预措施。关于DHI实施的相关成本、可持续性、可扩展性和数据治理的细节在大多数研究中没有描述。结论:虽然DHIs在COVID-19大流行期间为非传染性疾病管理提供了支持,但其实施在不同地区或非传染性疾病之间并不公平。DHIs虽然有望在医疗服务中断期间支持持续的医疗服务,但需要融入医疗服务环境,以加强卫生系统,而不是为克服系统层面的挑战而单独开展平行努力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Digital health innovations for non-communicable disease management during the COVID-19 pandemic: a rapid scoping review
Objective To identify and summarise the digital health interventions (DHIs) implemented for non-communicable disease (NCD) management for COVID-19. Design Rapid scoping review. Three reviewers jointly screened titles–abstracts and full texts. One reviewer screened all excluded records. Data were mapped to WHO DHI Classification and narratively summarised. Data sources PubMed, CENTRAL, CINAHL, EMBASE. Eligibility criteria for selecting studies Peer-reviewed primary research published between 1 November 2019 and 19 September 2021 on DHI for NCD management during the COVID-19 pandemic. Reviews, editorials, letters, commentaries, opinions, conference abstracts and grey literature were excluded. Results Eighty-three studies drawn from 5275 records were included. A majority of the studies were quantitative in design. Forty per cent of the DHIs were implemented in the Americas. Nearly half of these DHIs targeted mental health conditions. A majority of the interventions were delivered remotely and via telephones. Zoom (26.5%), email (17%) and WhatsApp (7.5%) were the top three platforms for care delivery. Telemedicine, targeted client interventions, personal health tracking and on-demand information services for clients were the most frequently implemented interventions. Details regarding associated costs, sustainability, scalability and data governance of the DHI implementations were not described in the majority of the studies. Conclusion While DHIs supported NCD management during the COVID-19 pandemic, their implementation has not been equitable across geographies or NCDs. While offering promise towards supporting the continuum of care during care delivery disruptions, DHIs need to be embedded into healthcare delivery settings towards strengthening health systems rather than standalone parallel efforts to overcome system level challenges.
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来源期刊
BMJ Innovations
BMJ Innovations Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
63
期刊介绍: Healthcare is undergoing a revolution and novel medical technologies are being developed to treat patients in better and faster ways. Mobile revolution has put a handheld computer in pockets of billions and we are ushering in an era of mHealth. In developed and developing world alike healthcare costs are a concern and frugal innovations are being promoted for bringing down the costs of healthcare. BMJ Innovations aims to promote innovative research which creates new, cost-effective medical devices, technologies, processes and systems that improve patient care, with particular focus on the needs of patients, physicians, and the health care industry as a whole and act as a platform to catalyse and seed more innovations. Submissions to BMJ Innovations will be considered from all clinical areas of medicine along with business and process innovations that make healthcare accessible and affordable. Submissions from groups of investigators engaged in international collaborations are especially encouraged. The broad areas of innovations that this journal aims to chronicle include but are not limited to: Medical devices, mHealth and wearable health technologies, Assistive technologies, Diagnostics, Health IT, systems and process innovation.
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