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移动健康和电子健康能否改善难以接触人群的糖尿病和高血压管理?——从数字健康过程评估中汲取的经验教训,以支持柬埔寨采用RE-AIM框架的同伴教育模式。

Can mHealth and eHealth improve management of diabetes and hypertension in a hard-to-reach population? -lessons learned from a process evaluation of digital health to support a peer educator model in Cambodia using the RE-AIM framework.

作者信息

Steinman Lesley, van Pelt Maurits, Hen Heang, Chhorvann Chhea, Lan Channe Suy, Te Vannarath, LoGerfo James, Fitzpatrick Annette L

机构信息

Department of Health Services, School of Public Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.

MoPoTsyo Patient Information Center, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

出版信息

Mhealth. 2020 Oct 5;6:40. doi: 10.21037/mhealth-19-249. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) is increasing in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) where NCDs cause 4:5 deaths, disproportionately affect poorer populations, and carry a large economic burden. Digital interventions can improve NCD management for these hard-to-reach populations with inadequate health systems and high cell-phone coverage; however, there is limited research on whether digital health is reaching this potential. We conducted a process evaluation to understand challenges and successes from a digital health intervention trial to support Cambodians living with NCDs in a peer educator (PE) program.

METHODS

MoPoTsyo, a Cambodian non-governmental organization (NGO), trains people living with diabetes and/or hypertension as PEs to provide self-management education, support, and healthcare linkages for better care management among underserved populations. We partnered with MoPoTsyo and InSTEDD in 2016-2018 to test tailored and targeted mHealth mobile voice messages and eHealth tablets to facilitate NCD management and clinical-community linkages. This cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) engaged 3,948 people and 75 PEs across rural and urban areas. Our mixed methods process evaluation was guided by RE-AIM to understand impact and real-world implications of digital health. Data included patient (20) and PE interviews (6), meeting notes, and administrative datasets. We triangulated and analyzed data using thematic analysis, and descriptive and complier average causal effects statistics (CACE).

RESULTS

Reach: intervention participants were more urban (66% 44%), had more PE visits (39 29), and lower uncontrolled hypertension [12% and 7% 23% and 16% uncontrolled systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP)]. Adoption: patients were sent mean [standard deviation (SD)] 30 [14] and received 14 [8] messages; 40% received no messages due to frequent phone number changes. Effectiveness: CACE found clinically but not statistically significant improvements in blood pressure and sugar for mHealth participants who received at least one message no messages. Implementation: main barriers were limited cellular access and that mHealth/eHealth could not solve structural barriers to NCD control faced by people in poverty. Maintenance: had the intervention been universally effective, it could be paid for from additional revolving drug fund revenue, new agreements with mobile networks, or the government.

CONCLUSIONS

Evidence for digital health to improve NCD outcomes in LMICs are limited. This study suggests digital health alone is insufficient in countries with low resource health systems and that high cell phone coverage did not translate to access. Adding digital health to an NCD peer network may not significantly benefit an already effective program; mHealth may be better for hard-to-reach populations not connected to other supports. As long as mHealth remains an individual-level intervention, it will not address social determinants of health that drive outcomes. Future digital health research and practice to improve NCD management in LMICs requires engaging government, NGOs, and technology providers to work together to address barriers.

摘要

背景

在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs),非传染性疾病(NCDs)的负担正在增加,这些国家4/5的死亡由非传染性疾病导致,对贫困人口的影响尤为严重,并带来了巨大的经济负担。数字干预措施可以改善这些卫生系统不完善但手机覆盖率高、难以接触到的人群的非传染性疾病管理;然而,关于数字健康是否正在发挥这种潜力的研究有限。我们进行了一项过程评估,以了解一项数字健康干预试验的挑战和成功经验,该试验旨在通过同伴教育者(PE)项目支持柬埔寨的非传染性疾病患者。

方法

柬埔寨非政府组织(NGO)MoPoTsyo培训糖尿病和/或高血压患者作为同伴教育者,为服务不足人群提供自我管理教育、支持和医疗保健联系,以实现更好的护理管理。2016 - 2018年,我们与MoPoTsyo和InSTEDD合作,测试定制和有针对性的移动健康(mHealth)手机语音信息和电子健康(eHealth)平板电脑,以促进非传染性疾病管理和临床 - 社区联系。这项整群随机对照试验(RCT)涉及农村和城市地区的3948人及75名同伴教育者。我们采用混合方法进行过程评估,以RE - AIM为指导,了解数字健康的影响和实际意义。数据包括患者访谈(20次)和同伴教育者访谈(6次)、会议记录以及行政数据集。我们使用主题分析、描述性统计和依从者平均因果效应统计(CACE)对数据进行三角测量和分析。

结果

覆盖范围:干预参与者中城市居民更多(66%对44%);接受同伴教育者探访的次数更多(39次对29次);未控制的高血压情况较少[收缩压(SBP)和舒张压(DBP)未控制的比例分别为12%和7%,而对照组为23%和16%]。采用情况:患者平均收到[标准差(SD)]30条[14条]信息,实际接收14条[8条];40%的患者因频繁更换电话号码未收到任何信息。有效性:CACE发现,对于至少收到一条信息的移动健康参与者,血压和血糖有临床改善但无统计学显著差异,而未收到信息的参与者无改善。实施情况:主要障碍是手机信号覆盖有限,且移动健康/电子健康无法解决贫困人口面临的非传染性疾病控制的结构性障碍。维持情况:如果干预措施普遍有效,可通过额外的循环药物基金收入、与移动网络的新协议或政府资金来维持。

结论

在低收入和中等收入国家,数字健康改善非传染性疾病结局的证据有限。本研究表明,在资源匮乏的卫生系统国家,仅靠数字健康是不够的,高手机覆盖率并不意味着能够获得服务。在非传染性疾病同伴网络中增加数字健康可能不会给一个已经有效的项目带来显著益处;移动健康可能更适合那些未与其他支持建立联系、难以接触到的人群。只要移动健康仍然是一种个人层面的干预措施,它就无法解决影响健康结局的社会决定因素。未来,为改善低收入和中等收入国家的非传染性疾病管理而进行的数字健康研究和实践需要政府、非政府组织和技术提供商共同努力,以消除障碍。

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