Ashraf Mir Nabila, Gallant Natasha L, Bradley Cara
Centre on Aging and Health, University of Regina, Regina, SK, Canada.
Department of Psychology and Centre on Aging and Health, University of Regina, Regina, SK, Canada.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2024 Mar 28;13:e49130. doi: 10.2196/49130.
Globally, around 80% percent of adults aged 65 years or older are living with at least 1 chronic disease, and 68% percent have 2 or more chronic diseases. Older adults living with chronic diseases require greater health care services, but these health care services are not always easily accessible. Furthermore, the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in unprecedented changes in the provision of health care services for older adults. During the COVID-19 pandemic, digital health interventions for chronic disease management were developed out of necessity, but the evidence regarding these and developed interventions is lacking.
In this scoping review, we aim to identify available digital health interventions such as emails, text messages, voice messages, telephone calls, video calls, mobile apps, and web-based platforms for chronic disease management for older adults in high-income countries.
We will follow the Arksey and O'Malley framework to conduct the scoping review. Our full search strategy was developed following a preliminary search on MEDLINE. We will include studies where older adults are at least 65 years of age, living with at least 1 chronic disease (eg, cancer, cardiovascular disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and diabetes), and residing in high-income countries. Digital health interventions will be broadly defined to include emails, text messages, voice messages, telephone calls, video calls, mobile apps, and web-based platforms.
This scoping review is currently ongoing. As of March 2023, our full search strategy has resulted in a total of 9901 records. We completed the screening of titles and abstracts and obtained 442 abstracts for full-text review. We are aiming to complete our full-text review in October 2024, data extraction in November 2024, and data synthesis in December 2024.
This scoping review will generate evidence that will contribute to the further development of digital health interventions for future chronic disease management among older adults in high-income countries. More evidence-based research is needed to better understand the feasibility and limitations associated with the use of digital health interventions for this population. These evidence-based findings can then be disseminated to decision-makers and policy makers in other high-income countries.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/49130.
在全球范围内,约80%的65岁及以上成年人患有一种及以上慢性病,68%的人患有两种及以上慢性病。患有慢性病的老年人需要更多的医疗服务,但这些医疗服务并非总是易于获得。此外,新冠疫情导致老年人医疗服务的提供发生了前所未有的变化。在新冠疫情期间,出于必要开发了用于慢性病管理的数字健康干预措施,但缺乏关于这些干预措施及已开发干预措施的证据。
在本范围综述中,我们旨在识别可用的数字健康干预措施,如电子邮件、短信、语音消息、电话、视频通话、移动应用程序和基于网络的平台,用于高收入国家老年人的慢性病管理。
我们将遵循阿克斯和奥马利框架进行范围综述。我们的全面检索策略是在对MEDLINE进行初步检索后制定的。我们将纳入年龄至少65岁、患有一种及以上慢性病(如癌症、心血管疾病、慢性阻塞性肺疾病和糖尿病)且居住在高收入国家的老年人的研究。数字健康干预措施将被广泛定义为包括电子邮件、短信、语音消息、电话、视频通话、移动应用程序和基于网络的平台。
本范围综述目前正在进行中。截至2023年3月,我们的全面检索策略共检索到9901条记录。我们完成了标题和摘要的筛选,获得了442篇摘要进行全文审查。我们计划在2024年10月完成全文审查,2024年11月进行数据提取,2024年12月进行数据综合。
本范围综述将产生证据,有助于进一步开发数字健康干预措施,用于未来高收入国家老年人的慢性病管理。需要更多基于证据的研究,以更好地了解针对该人群使用数字健康干预措施的可行性和局限性。然后可以将这些基于证据的研究结果传播给其他高收入国家的决策者和政策制定者。
国际注册报告识别号(IRRID):DERR1-10.2196/49130