Weatherly Shannon, McKenna Tara, Wahba Simon, Friedman Arielle, Goltry Wesley, Wahid Talha, Abourahma Hussein, Lee Kenneth, Rehman Ahmed, Odeh Ali, Costin Joshua
Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine, Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, USA.
Department of Medical Education, Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Allopathic Medicine, Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, USA.
Cureus. 2024 Oct 28;16(10):e72562. doi: 10.7759/cureus.72562. eCollection 2024 Oct.
This review aims to address the impact of digital health interventions (DHIs) on chronic pain management, specifically, mHealth, eHealth, wearable devices, virtual reality (VR), and artificial intelligence. The following study identifies and assesses DHIs' efficacy in specific chronic pain conditions and then extrapolates improved outcomes and patient groups that benefit from their use. Using a systematic methodology, this review synthesizes findings that could improve knowledge for patients and practitioners in chronic pain management while also addressing gaps in understanding the impact of DHIs. Sub-questions guide the identification of gaps and recommendations assessing DHIs' effectiveness for pain reduction and improved quality of life. A systematic search across databases (EMBASE, Ovid MEDLINE, CINAHL, Web of Sciences, Cochrane Central) targets original, English-language, peer-reviewed studies (2013-2023). The inclusion criteria cover DHIs in chronic pain management for adults age 18+, excluding non-full texts, reviews, opinion pieces, or unrelated articles. Search terms include "chronic pain management" OR "long-term pain relief strategies" OR "sustained pain alleviation" OR "pain control for chronic conditions" OR "chronic pain" AND "ehealth interventions" OR "mobile health interventions" OR "digital therapy" OR "health informatic solutions" OR "digital health intervention." After applying inclusion criteria, 34 articles from 11 countries are included, with studies conducted primarily in the United States (n = 17), United Kingdom (n = 4), and Australia (n = 3). DHIs are emerging as effective tools in pain management, as they can emphasize patient autonomy and communication with clinicians while enabling medical self-management in diverse populations. These various digital interventions show promise in reducing pharmaceutical usage and deferring surgical procedures, with most studies reporting positive outcomes in pain reduction. DHIs were also associated with positive mental health outcomes; however, some studies found no significant improvement. Additionally, interventions targeting pain catastrophizing showed varied results, with some app-based approaches demonstrating promise. Overall, the review underscores the potential of DHIs in improving chronic pain management outcomes.
本综述旨在探讨数字健康干预措施(DHI)对慢性疼痛管理的影响,具体包括移动健康、电子健康、可穿戴设备、虚拟现实(VR)和人工智能。以下研究识别并评估了DHI在特定慢性疼痛状况下的疗效,然后推断出使用DHI可改善的结果以及受益的患者群体。本综述采用系统方法,综合了有助于提高患者和从业者在慢性疼痛管理方面知识的研究结果,同时也填补了在理解DHI影响方面的空白。子问题指导对空白的识别以及对DHI减轻疼痛和改善生活质量有效性的评估建议。对多个数据库(EMBASE、Ovid MEDLINE、CINAHL、Web of Sciences、Cochrane Central)进行的系统检索,目标是2013年至2023年的原创英文同行评审研究。纳入标准涵盖针对18岁及以上成年人慢性疼痛管理的DHI,排除非全文、综述、观点文章或无关文章。检索词包括“慢性疼痛管理”或“长期疼痛缓解策略”或“持续疼痛缓解”或“慢性病疼痛控制”或“慢性疼痛”以及“电子健康干预”或“移动健康干预”或“数字疗法”或“健康信息解决方案”或“数字健康干预”。应用纳入标准后,纳入了来自11个国家的34篇文章,主要在美国(n = 17)、英国(n = 4)和澳大利亚(n = 3)开展研究。DHI正在成为疼痛管理中的有效工具,因为它们可以强调患者自主性以及与临床医生的沟通,同时使不同人群能够进行医疗自我管理。这些各种数字干预措施在减少药物使用和推迟手术程序方面显示出前景,大多数研究报告在减轻疼痛方面取得了积极成果。DHI还与积极的心理健康结果相关;然而,一些研究未发现显著改善。此外,针对疼痛灾难化的干预措施结果各异,一些基于应用程序的方法显示出前景。总体而言,该综述强调了DHI在改善慢性疼痛管理结果方面的潜力。