Hall Andrew Michael, Allgar Victoria, Carroll Camille B, Meinert Edward
Faculty of Health School of Medicine, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK.
University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK.
BMJ Open. 2025 Jan 21;15(1):e088616. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-088616.
Prior research has identified that people with Parkinson's reporting lower levels of self-efficacy exhibit worsening motor and non-motor symptomology, reduced quality of life, and self-management. Our key objective was to conduct a scoping review examining the impact of digital health technologies on self-efficacy in people with Parkinson's.
A scoping review using Arksey and O'Malley's (2005) framework was undertaken.
MEDLINE, Embase, PsychINFO, CINAHL, Web of Science, IEEE Xplore, and Google Scholar principally for grey literature were searched from 1 January 2008 to the 24th of July 2024.
Primary studies which incorporated digital health technologies, measured self-efficacy and had a sample population of people with Parkinson's were searched.
Following identification of potentially eligible records, two independent reviewers undertook title and abstract screening, followed by full-text screening. Data was extracted using our earlier published data extraction sheet which incorporated the Practical Reviews in Self-Management Support (PRISMS) taxonomy, and the template for intervention description and replication (TIDieR) checklist. Data was extracted from a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet and synthesised by describing themes, demographic data and numerical data.
From 33 165 unique records following screening and independent review by two reviewers, 11 eligible records were found. Of these five elevated self-efficacy to a statistically significant level, five did not and one lowered self-efficacy. Of the studies which raised self-efficacy to a statistically significant level, all adopted a multimodal approach with a variety of devices. Thematically, these devices were focused on physical activity, falls/falls prevention, or both. The level of heterogeneity precluded comparisons between studies.
This scoping review identified significant knowledge and evidence gaps in the literature, and the limited number of eligible studies make these findings not generalisable. Future self-management research might benefit from also considering self-efficacy.
先前的研究已经确定,报告自我效能水平较低的帕金森病患者会出现运动和非运动症状恶化、生活质量下降以及自我管理能力降低的情况。我们的主要目标是进行一项范围综述,研究数字健康技术对帕金森病患者自我效能的影响。
采用阿克斯和奥马利(2005年)的框架进行范围综述。
检索了MEDLINE、Embase、PsychINFO、CINAHL、科学网、IEEE Xplore以及主要用于灰色文献的谷歌学术,检索时间从2008年1月1日至2024年7月24日。
检索纳入了数字健康技术、测量了自我效能且样本为帕金森病患者的原始研究。
在确定了潜在符合条件的记录后,两名独立评审员进行了标题和摘要筛选,随后进行全文筛选。使用我们早期发表的数据提取表提取数据,该表纳入了自我管理支持的实践综述(PRISMS)分类法以及干预描述与复制模板(TIDieR)清单。数据从Microsoft Excel电子表格中提取,并通过描述主题、人口统计学数据和数值数据进行综合。
经过两名评审员的筛选和独立评审,从33165条独特记录中,发现了11条符合条件的记录。其中五条将自我效能提高到了统计学显著水平,五条没有,一条降低了自我效能。在将自我效能提高到统计学显著水平的研究中,所有研究都采用了多模式方法,使用了多种设备。从主题上看,这些设备主要集中在身体活动、跌倒/预防跌倒或两者兼顾。异质性水平妨碍了研究之间的比较。
这项范围综述发现了文献中存在重大的知识和证据空白,且符合条件的研究数量有限,使得这些结果无法推广。未来的自我管理研究可能也会从考虑自我效能中受益。