Al-Jabr Hiyam, Salt Emma, Stephenson John, Hamdan Esra, Helliwell Toby
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Keele University, Staffordshire, United Kingdom.
Department of Research and Innovation, Midlands Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust, Stafford, United Kingdom.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2025 Jul 28;14:e67675. doi: 10.2196/67675.
The use of digital health (DH) interventions has increased over the past 2 decades, providing patients with alternative remote pathways for receiving health care services. Patients with major trauma frequently require long-term access to health care services to support their mental and physical health and their overall quality of life. DH interventions can help patients stay connected to rehabilitation services, thereby enhancing their health condition and helping them regain their independence, which will enable them to return to the workplace or regain a role in society. There is a need to explore existing evidence on the effectiveness of DH interventions for improving health-related outcomes in patients with major trauma.
This review aims to identify DH interventions that support the physical, functional, or psychological rehabilitation of patients who have experienced major physical trauma.
This review targets randomized controlled trials. Studies investigating DH interventions in adult patients with major traumatic physical injuries (end users of the interventions) are considered eligible for inclusion. Digital interventions that are delivered remotely and studies that report the impact of DH interventions on patients' health-related outcomes will be included. The search will be limited to publications since 2000 and peer-reviewed journals. No language restrictions will be applied, and articles not written in English will be translated. The search will be conducted in MEDLINE, Embase, AMED, CINAHL Plus, and PsycInfo. Grey literature and bibliographies of included studies and relevant reviews will also be searched for potentially relevant articles. A minimum of two reviewers will independently screen retrieved references. Data extraction will be conducted by 1 reviewer and independently checked by another reviewer. Quality assessment of the included studies will be conducted using the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2 tool. Any disagreements arising at any stage of the review will be resolved through discussion or by consulting a third reviewer, if required. A meta-analysis will be performed where possible, and a descriptive analysis of the included studies will be reported.
As of January 2025, the systematic review is in the data extraction stage. Seven studies have been identified as eligible for inclusion. The findings are expected to be published in a peer-reviewed journal by December 2025.
The review findings will help identify existing evidence regarding DH interventions used to support the physical, functional, or psychological rehabilitation needs of patients with major trauma. This would help guide practitioners and policy makers to implement effective interventions to better support patient outcomes. The evidence synthesized from this review will also identify existing gaps and direct future research.
PROSPERO CRD42023485748; https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/view/CRD42023485748.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/67675.
在过去20年中,数字健康(DH)干预措施的使用有所增加,为患者提供了接受医疗服务的替代性远程途径。重大创伤患者经常需要长期获得医疗服务,以支持他们的身心健康和整体生活质量。DH干预措施可以帮助患者与康复服务保持联系,从而改善他们的健康状况,帮助他们恢复独立,这将使他们能够重返工作岗位或重新融入社会。有必要探索现有证据,以证明DH干预措施对改善重大创伤患者健康相关结局的有效性。
本综述旨在确定支持经历重大身体创伤患者身体、功能或心理康复的DH干预措施。
本综述以随机对照试验为目标。调查DH干预措施在成年重大创伤性身体损伤患者(干预措施的最终用户)中的研究被认为符合纳入条件。将纳入远程提供的数字干预措施以及报告DH干预措施对患者健康相关结局影响的研究。检索将限于2000年以来的出版物和同行评审期刊。不设语言限制,非英文撰写的文章将进行翻译。检索将在MEDLINE、Embase、AMED、CINAHL Plus和PsycInfo中进行。还将搜索灰色文献以及纳入研究和相关综述的参考文献,以寻找潜在的相关文章。至少两名评审员将独立筛选检索到的参考文献。数据提取将由一名评审员进行,并由另一名评审员独立检查。将使用Cochrane偏倚风险2工具对纳入研究进行质量评估。在综述的任何阶段出现的任何分歧将通过讨论解决,如有必要,将咨询第三位评审员。将尽可能进行荟萃分析,并报告纳入研究的描述性分析。
截至2025年1月,系统综述处于数据提取阶段。已确定7项研究符合纳入条件。研究结果预计将于2025年12月发表在同行评审期刊上。
综述结果将有助于确定关于用于支持重大创伤患者身体、功能或心理康复需求的DH干预措施的现有证据。这将有助于指导从业者和政策制定者实施有效的干预措施,以更好地支持患者的结局。本综述综合的证据还将确定现有差距,并指导未来的研究。
PROSPERO CRD42023485748;https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/view/CRD42023485748。
国际注册报告识别号(IRRID):DERR1-10.2196/67675。