Nursing Department, College of Applied Medical Sciences-Yanbu, Taibah University, Medina 42353, Saudi Arabia.
Medical Surgical Nursing Department, Faculty of Nursing, Ain Shams University, Cairo 11566, Egypt.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Oct 4;19(19):12682. doi: 10.3390/ijerph191912682.
Noncommunicable chronic diseases (NCDs) are multifaceted, and the health implications of the COVID-19 pandemic are far-reaching, especially for NCDs. Physical distancing and quarantine can lead to the poor management of NCDs because the visual tracking of them has been replaced with medical digital technology, that is, smartphone apps. This study aimed to explore medical digital technology applications for NCDs for follow-up during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The participants in this study were 400 adult patients with NCDs; they were selected by systematic random sampling. A descriptive cross-sectional design was used. The study was conducted in the outpatient department of Yanbu General Hospital and primary-care health centers in Yanbu Al-Baher, Al-Madinah Al-Munawwarah, in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The tools used in this study were a structured questionnaire to collect the sociodemographic characteristics of the patients and their health history, an NCD questionnaire to assess follow-up of the patients during the COVID-19 pandemic, and a medical digital technologies questionnaire to explore the medical digital technology applications.
The mean age of the patients was 47.32 ± 14.362 years, and 62.8% of them were female and 372 were male. Of the patients, 69.2% and 57.5% had been diagnosed with diabetes mellitus and hypertension, respectively; 52.4% were followed up monthly, and 29.75% used medical digital technology applications such as Tabeby Online to monitor their health. Furthermore, 71.75% and 75.5% of the patients used the Sehhaty and Tawakkalna medical digital applications, respectively. Overall, 38.7% of the patients were satisfied with using medical digital technology applications used for follow-up during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The study concluded that the services that use networks, smartphones, and medical digital technology applications on the Saudi Ministry of Health website and mobile applications to improve the quality of the health-care system, and that provide health services for noncommunicable or communicable diseases, are not effective. This is because the patients lack awareness of these services, with most of the chronic patients being elderly with lower levels of education and computer literacy.
非传染性慢性病(NCDs)是多方面的,COVID-19 大流行对 NCDs 的影响深远,尤其是对 NCDs 的影响。身体距离和隔离会导致 NCDs 管理不善,因为对它们的视觉跟踪已被医疗数字技术(即智能手机应用程序)所取代。本研究旨在探讨 COVID-19 大流行期间用于 NCD 随访的医疗数字技术应用。
本研究的参与者是 400 名患有 NCD 的成年患者;他们通过系统随机抽样选择。采用描述性横断面设计。该研究在沙特阿拉伯麦地那省延布总医院的门诊部和延布阿尔巴赫尔的初级保健中心进行。本研究使用的工具包括一份结构化问卷,用于收集患者的社会人口统计学特征和健康史;一份 NCD 问卷,用于评估 COVID-19 大流行期间患者的随访情况;以及一份医疗数字技术问卷,用于探索医疗数字技术的应用。
患者的平均年龄为 47.32±14.362 岁,其中 62.8%为女性,372 名为男性。患者中,分别有 69.2%和 57.5%被诊断患有糖尿病和高血压;52.4%的患者每月接受随访,29.75%的患者使用 Tabeby Online 等医疗数字技术应用程序监测自己的健康状况。此外,分别有 71.75%和 75.5%的患者使用 Sehhaty 和 Tawakkalna 医疗数字应用程序。总的来说,38.7%的患者对在 COVID-19 大流行期间使用医疗数字技术应用程序进行随访感到满意。
研究得出结论,使用网络、智能手机和医疗数字技术应用程序的服务,通过沙特卫生部网站和移动应用程序来提高医疗保健系统的质量,并为非传染性或传染性疾病提供医疗服务,这些服务并不有效。这是因为患者对这些服务缺乏认识,大多数慢性患者都是教育程度和计算机使用水平较低的老年人。