Salmensuu Olli, Hyttinen-Huotari Virva, Isotalo Jenni, Rijken Mieke, Linnosmaa Ismo, Kaarakainen Minna
Nurs Res. 2025;74(4):305-312. doi: 10.1097/NNR.0000000000000824. Epub 2025 Apr 2.
Population aging has increased the need for solutions that help older adults live independently in their own homes, where medication management is a major challenge.
In this systematic review, we assessed the effects of medication dispensers among home-dwelling older adults on outcomes within the five domains of the Quintuple Aim framework: user experiences, health and well-being outcomes, health service utilization and costs, care professional experiences, and equity.
We identified relevant studies by searching databases (Scopus, CENTRAL, PubMed, Web of Science, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Cochrane Reviews) from January 2017 to April 2022 with a predefined search strategy and two-person abstract and full-text screening. Two authors extracted the most relevant data and assessed quality for each included study. We assessed the evidence using a four-level quality rating measure: strong, moderate, limited, or no evidence.
We included five original studies and three systematic reviews, which provided information on 20 additional original studies. Data were extracted from these 25 original studies. We found significant results in 16 of them, mostly pointing to the beneficial effects of dispenser devices. Significant results for health and well-being outcomes were found in 13 out of 21 studies in which these were assessed, for service utilization in two out of five studies, for costs in two out of three studies, and for patient/carer experiences in one out of five studies. No study evaluated professional experiences or equity outcomes. Overall, strong evidence of a beneficial effect of dispenser devices in any outcome is lacking, but they can improve health outcomes (moderate evidence of beneficial effects of using dispenser devices on systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and hemoglobin A1c levels). For other outcome domains, there is no or only limited evidence for beneficial effects of dispenser devices.
We found that the use of dispenser devices by home-dwelling older adults can improve clinical health outcomes and may reduce health service utilization and costs. More high-quality research is needed to get a better insight into their effects on service utilization and costs. Future studies should also examine the effects on care professionals' experiences and equity.
人口老龄化增加了对帮助老年人在自己家中独立生活的解决方案的需求,而药物管理是一项重大挑战。
在本系统评价中,我们评估了居家老年人使用药物分配器对“五重目标”框架五个领域结局的影响:用户体验、健康和幸福结局、卫生服务利用和成本、护理专业人员体验以及公平性。
我们通过从2017年1月至2022年4月检索数据库(Scopus、CENTRAL、PubMed、Web of Science、CINAHL、PsycINFO和Cochrane系统评价),采用预定义的检索策略以及双人摘要和全文筛选来识别相关研究。两位作者提取了每个纳入研究的最相关数据并评估质量。我们使用四级质量评级方法评估证据:强证据、中等证据、有限证据或无证据。
我们纳入了五项原始研究和三项系统评价,它们提供了另外20项原始研究的信息。从这25项原始研究中提取了数据。我们在其中16项研究中发现了显著结果,大多指向分配器设备的有益效果。在评估了健康和幸福结局的21项研究中,有13项发现了显著结果;在五项研究中的两项中发现了对服务利用的显著结果;在三项研究中的两项中发现了对成本的显著结果;在五项研究中的一项中发现了对患者/护理人员体验的显著结果。没有研究评估专业人员体验或公平性结局。总体而言,缺乏分配器设备在任何结局方面产生有益效果的强证据,但它们可以改善健康结局(使用分配器设备对收缩压、舒张压和糖化血红蛋白水平产生有益效果的中等证据)。对于其他结局领域,分配器设备产生有益效果的证据不存在或仅有有限证据。
我们发现居家老年人使用分配器设备可以改善临床健康结局,并可能降低卫生服务利用和成本。需要更多高质量研究以更好地了解它们对服务利用和成本的影响。未来研究还应考察对护理专业人员体验和公平性的影响。