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移动医疗应用程序在评估和管理糖尿病相关足部健康结局中的应用:系统评价。

The Use of mHealth Apps for the Assessment and Management of Diabetes-Related Foot Health Outcomes: Systematic Review.

机构信息

Western Sydney University, Campbelltown, Australia.

University of Newcastle, Ourimbah, Australia.

出版信息

J Med Internet Res. 2023 Oct 4;25:e47608. doi: 10.2196/47608.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Globally, diabetes affects approximately 500 million people and is predicted to affect up to 700 million people by 2045. In Australia, the ongoing impact of colonization produces inequity in health care delivery and inequality in health care outcomes for First Nations Peoples, with diabetes rates 4 times those of non-Indigenous Australians. Evidence-based clinical practice has been shown to reduce complications of diabetes-related foot disease, including ulceration and amputation, by 50%. However, factors such as a lack of access to culturally safe care, geographical remoteness, and high costs associated with in-person care are key barriers for First Nations Peoples in accessing evidence-based care, leading to the development of innovative mobile health (mHealth) apps as a way to increase access to health services and improve knowledge and self-care management for people with diabetes.

OBJECTIVE

This study aims to evaluate studies investigating the use of mHealth apps for the assessment and management of diabetes-related foot health in First Nations Peoples in Australia and non-Indigenous populations globally.

METHODS

PubMed, Informit's Indigenous Collection database, Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL Complete, and Scopus were searched from inception to September 8, 2022. Hand searches of gray literature and reference lists of included studies were conducted. Studies describing mHealth apps developed for the assessment and management of diabetes-related foot health were eligible. Studies must include an evaluation (qualitative or quantitative) of the mHealth app. No language, publication date, or publication status restrictions were used. Quality appraisal was performed using the revised Cochrane risk-of-bias tool for randomized trials and the Health Evidence Bulletins Wales checklists for observational, cohort, and qualitative studies.

RESULTS

No studies specifically including First Nations Peoples in Australia were identified. Six studies in non-Indigenous populations with 361 participants were included. Foot care education was the main component of all mHealth apps. Of the 6 mHealth apps, 2 (33%) provided functionality for participants to enter health-related data; 1 (17%) included a messaging interface. The length of follow-up ranged from 1-6 months. Of the 6 studies, 1 (17%) reported high levels of acceptability of the mHealth app content for self-care by people with diabetes and diabetes specialists; the remaining 5 (83%) reported that participants had improved diabetes-related knowledge and self-management skills after using their mHealth app.

CONCLUSIONS

The findings from this systematic review provide an overview of the features deployed in mHealth apps and indicate that this type of intervention can improve knowledge and self-care management skills in non-Indigenous people with diabetes. Future research needs to focus on mHealth apps for populations where there is inadequate or ineffective service delivery, including for First Nations Peoples and those living in geographically remote areas, as well as evaluate direct effects on diabetes-related foot disease outcomes.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

PROSPERO CRD42022349087; https://tinyurl.com/35u6mmzd.

摘要

背景

全球范围内,糖尿病影响着约 5 亿人,预计到 2045 年将影响多达 7 亿人。在澳大利亚,殖民化的持续影响导致原住民在医疗保健服务提供方面存在不平等,在医疗保健结果方面存在不平等,糖尿病发病率是非原住民澳大利亚人的 4 倍。循证临床实践已证明,可将糖尿病相关足部疾病(包括溃疡和截肢)的并发症减少 50%。然而,缺乏获得文化安全护理的机会、地理位置偏远以及与面对面护理相关的高昂费用等因素,是原住民获得循证护理的主要障碍,导致创新型移动医疗(mHealth)应用程序的开发,以增加获得医疗服务的机会,并提高糖尿病患者的知识和自我护理管理水平。

目的

本研究旨在评估针对澳大利亚原住民和全球非原住民人群中,用于评估和管理糖尿病相关足部健康的 mHealth 应用程序的研究。

方法

从 2022 年 9 月 8 日开始,我们在 PubMed、Informit 的原住民数据库、Ovid MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL Complete 和 Scopus 中进行了搜索。我们还对灰色文献和纳入研究的参考文献进行了手工检索。描述用于评估和管理糖尿病相关足部健康的 mHealth 应用程序的研究符合入选标准。研究必须包括对 mHealth 应用程序的评估(定性或定量)。我们没有使用语言、出版日期或出版状态的限制。使用修订后的 Cochrane 随机试验偏倚风险工具和 Health Evidence Bulletins Wales 观察性、队列和定性研究清单对质量进行评估。

结果

我们未发现专门针对澳大利亚原住民的研究。纳入了 6 项针对非原住民人群的研究,共纳入 361 名参与者。足部护理教育是所有 mHealth 应用程序的主要组成部分。在 6 个 mHealth 应用程序中,有 2 个(33%)提供了让参与者输入健康相关数据的功能;有 1 个(17%)包含了消息界面。随访时间从 1-6 个月不等。在 6 项研究中,有 1 项(17%)报告说糖尿病患者和糖尿病专家对 mHealth 应用程序内容的自我护理的接受程度很高;其余 5 项(83%)报告说,参与者在使用 mHealth 应用程序后,糖尿病相关知识和自我管理技能有所提高。

结论

本系统评价的结果提供了 mHealth 应用程序中部署的功能概述,并表明这种干预类型可以提高非原住民糖尿病患者的知识和自我护理管理技能。未来的研究需要专注于服务提供不足或无效的人群的 mHealth 应用程序,包括原住民和居住在地理位置偏远地区的人群,以及评估对糖尿病相关足部疾病结果的直接影响。

试验注册

PROSPERO CRD42022349087;https://tinyurl.com/35u6mmzd。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/9805/10585435/3232cbd12433/jmir_v25i1e47608_fig1.jpg

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