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数字健康对患有膝关节疾病的老年人运动依从性和干预结果的影响:一项系统综述。

The effects of digital health on exercise adherence and intervention outcomes in older adults with knee diseases: A systematic review.

作者信息

Liu Lu, Wang Su, Ye Chenyan, Chen Dong, Dong Hua

机构信息

College of Engineering, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing, China.

Department of Acupuncture, Jiangsu Province Hospital of Chinese Medicine, Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine, Nanjing, China.

出版信息

Ann Phys Rehabil Med. 2025 Jun;68(5):101952. doi: 10.1016/j.rehab.2025.101952. Epub 2025 Mar 12.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Poor adherence is commonly observed as one of the characteristics of exercise interventions and there is little consensus as to whether digital interventions promote exercise adherence in people undergoing physiotherapy, especially in older adults with knee diseases.

PURPOSE

To investigate the effects of digital health for improving the exercise adherence and intervention outcomes.

METHODS

A systematic search was conducted on 4 databases; PRISMA reporting guidelines were followed. Journal articles in English (published till June 30, 2024) reporting digital health on exercise adherence and intervention outcomes for older adults with knee diseases were searched, and eligible articles underwent data extraction and a thematic synthesis.

RESULTS

Of the 1015 potentially relevant trials, 13 studies totaling 1258 participants were eligible for inclusion. Digital health was slightly better but not significant than non-digital health on total adherence (SMD 0.29, 95 % CI -0.02 to 0.60; P = 0.07; I = 77 %). At short-term follow-up, digital health improved adherence compared with nondigital health (SMD 0.70, 95 % CI 0.39-1.01; P< 0.001; I = 4 %), with a very low certainty of evidence. At mid- and long-term, digital health was no better than non-digital health on adherence (mid-term: SMD 0.01, 95 % CI -0.55 to 0.58; P= 0.97; I = 86 %; long-term: SMD 0.09, 95 % CI -0.31 to 0.49, P = 0.66; I = 48 %). For the intervention outcomes, digital health reduced the pain only at short-term and was no better than non-digital health on physical function, ADL or QoL at any time point.

CONCLUSION

The available evidence is insufficient to draw the conclusion that digital health technology improves exercise adherence and intervention outcomes in older people with knee disease, and there is very low to low certainty of evidence supporting improvements of adherence and pain only at short-term. Larger-scale, more reliable studies and strategies are needed to enhance mid- and long-term adherence and intervention outcomes in older adults.

摘要

背景

依从性差是运动干预常见的特征之一,对于数字干预是否能提高接受物理治疗的人群,尤其是患有膝关节疾病的老年人的运动依从性,目前几乎没有共识。

目的

研究数字健康对提高运动依从性和干预效果的影响。

方法

对4个数据库进行系统检索;遵循PRISMA报告指南。检索截至2024年6月30日发表的英文期刊文章,这些文章报道了数字健康对患有膝关节疾病的老年人运动依从性和干预效果的影响,符合条件的文章进行了数据提取和主题综合分析。

结果

在1015项潜在相关试验中,13项研究共1258名参与者符合纳入标准。在总依从性方面,数字健康略优于非数字健康,但差异不显著(标准化均数差0.29,95%可信区间-0.02至0.60;P = 0.07;I² = 77%)。在短期随访中,与非数字健康相比,数字健康提高了依从性(标准化均数差0.70,95%可信区间0.39 - 1.01;P < 0.001;I² = 4%),证据确定性非常低。在中期和长期,数字健康在依从性方面并不优于非数字健康(中期:标准化均数差0.01,95%可信区间-0.55至0.58;P = 0.97;I² = 86%;长期:标准化均数差0.09,95%可信区间-0.31至0.49,P = 0.66;I² = 48%)。对于干预效果,数字健康仅在短期内减轻了疼痛,在任何时间点的身体功能、日常生活活动能力或生活质量方面并不优于非数字健康。

结论

现有证据不足以得出数字健康技术能提高患有膝关节疾病老年人的运动依从性和干预效果的结论,仅在短期内支持依从性和疼痛改善的证据确定性非常低至低。需要更大规模、更可靠的研究和策略来提高老年人的中长期依从性和干预效果。

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