Ellis Louise A, Meulenbroeks Isabelle, Churruca Kate, Pomare Chiara, Hatem Sarah, Harrison Reema, Zurynski Yvonne, Braithwaite Jeffrey
Centre for Healthcare Resilience and Implementation Science, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
National Health and Medical Research Council Partnership Centre for Health System Sustainability, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
JMIR Ment Health. 2021 Dec 6;8(12):e32948. doi: 10.2196/32948.
The COVID-19 pandemic and its mitigation measures and impacts, such as shelter-in-place orders, social isolation, restrictions on freedoms, unemployment, financial insecurity, and disrupted routines, have led to declines in mental health worldwide and concomitant escalating demands for mental health services. Under the circumstances, electronic mental health (e-mental health) programs and services have rapidly become the "new normal."
The aim of this study was to assess key characteristics and evidence gaps in the e-mental health literature published in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic via a scoping review and bibliometric analysis.
We conducted a search of four academic databases (ie, MEDLINE, Embase, PsycInfo, and CINAHL) for documents published from December 31, 2019, to March 31, 2021, using keywords for e-mental health and COVID-19. Article information was extracted that was relevant to the review objective, including journal, type of article, keywords, focus, and corresponding author. Information was synthesized by coding these attributes and was then summarized through descriptive statistics and narrative techniques. Article influence was examined from Altmetric and CiteScore data, and a network analysis was conducted on article keywords.
A total of 356 publications were included in the review. Articles on e-mental health quickly thrived early in the pandemic, with most articles being nonempirical, chiefly commentaries or opinions (n=225, 63.2%). Empirical publications emerged later and became more frequent as the pandemic progressed. The United States contributed the most articles (n=160, 44.9%), though a notable number came from middle-income countries (n=59, 16.6%). Articles were spread across 165 journals and had above-average influence (ie, almost half of the articles were in the top 25% of output scores by Altmetric, and the average CiteScore across articles was 4.22). The network analysis of author-supplied keywords identified key topic areas, including specific mental disorders, eHealth modalities, issues and challenges, and populations of interest. These were further explored via full-text analysis. Applications of e-mental health during the pandemic overcame, or were influenced by, system, service, technology, provider, and patient factors.
COVID-19 has accelerated applications of e-mental health. Further research is needed to support the implementation of e-mental health across system and service infrastructures, alongside evidence of the relative effectiveness of e-mental health in comparison to traditional modes of care.
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行及其缓解措施和影响,如就地避难令、社会隔离、自由限制、失业、财务不安全和日常活动中断,导致全球心理健康状况下降,同时对心理健康服务的需求不断增加。在这种情况下,电子心理健康(e-心理健康)项目和服务迅速成为“新常态”。
本研究旨在通过范围综述和文献计量分析,评估与COVID-19大流行相关的已发表e-心理健康文献的关键特征和证据空白。
我们在四个学术数据库(即MEDLINE、Embase、PsycInfo和CINAHL)中进行检索,查找2019年12月31日至2021年3月31日期间发表的文献,使用了e-心理健康和COVID-19的关键词。提取与综述目标相关的文章信息,包括期刊、文章类型、关键词、重点内容和通讯作者。通过对这些属性进行编码来综合信息,然后通过描述性统计和叙述性技术进行总结。从Altmetric和CiteScore数据中考察文章影响力,并对文章关键词进行网络分析。
本综述共纳入356篇出版物。关于e-心理健康的文章在大流行早期迅速增多,大多数文章是非实证性的,主要是评论或观点(n = 225,63.2%)。实证性出版物出现较晚,随着大流行的发展变得更加频繁。美国发表的文章最多(n = 160,44.9%),不过也有相当数量的文章来自中等收入国家(n = 59,16.6%)。文章分布在165种期刊上,影响力高于平均水平(即几乎一半的文章在Altmetric产出得分的前25%,文章的平均CiteScore为4.22)。对作者提供的关键词进行网络分析,确定了关键主题领域,包括特定精神障碍、电子健康模式、问题与挑战以及感兴趣的人群。通过全文分析对这些主题进行了进一步探讨。大流行期间e-心理健康的应用克服了或受到系统、服务、技术、提供者和患者因素的影响。
COVID-19加速了e-心理健康的应用。需要进一步研究以支持e-心理健康在整个系统和服务基础设施中的实施,同时需要有证据证明e-心理健康相对于传统护理模式的相对有效性。