Hepburn Jennifer, Williams Lynn, McCann Lisa
Department of Psychological Sciences and Health, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
Department of Computer and Information Sciences, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
JMIR Aging. 2025 Sep 11;8:e80000. doi: 10.2196/80000.
Older adults with chronic diseases are key beneficiaries of digital health technologies, yet adoption remains inconsistent, particularly in rural areas and among certain demographic groups, such as older women.
This systematic review aimed to identify barriers to and facilitators of digital health adoption among older adults with chronic diseases, with particular attention to rural-urban differences, co-design, and equity-relevant factors.
This updated review built on a previously published review by extending the search to include PsycArticles, Scopus, Web of Science, and PubMed databases for studies published between April 2022 and September 2024. Gray literature from August 2021 onward was also included. Studies were eligible if they reported barriers to or facilitators of digital health adoption among adults aged ≥60 years with chronic diseases. Findings were mapped to the capability, opportunity, and motivation-behavior model and analyzed using the PROGRESS-Plus (place of residence; race, ethnicity, culture, and language; occupation; gender and sex; religion; education; socioeconomic status; and social capital-plus) equity framework. Quality was assessed using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool, and all results are reported in line with the PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) guidelines.
In total, 12 studies from the original review were retained, with 17 new peer-reviewed studies added, yielding a total of 29 studies in addition to 30 documents identified in the gray literature search. Barriers included limited digital literacy and physical and cognitive challenges (capability); infrastructural deficits and usability challenges (opportunity); and privacy concerns, mistrust, and high satisfaction with existing care (motivation). Facilitators included tailored training and accessible design (capability), health care provider endorsement and hybrid care models (opportunity), and recognition of digital health benefits (motivation). Health care providers emerged as both facilitators and barriers, positively influencing adoption when engaged and trained but hindering it when lacking confidence or involvement. Comparative analysis of rural and urban contexts was limited by inconsistent reporting of equity-relevant variables. However, gray literature suggested that rural users face additional infrastructural challenges but express higher satisfaction with local care, potentially reducing motivation for digital uptake. Gender differences were observed in 5% (3/59) of the peer-reviewed studies and gray literature sources, with older women showing lower adoption and differing outcome priorities. Co-design enhanced adoption, especially when involving not just older adults but also health care providers and community stakeholders.
Digital health adoption among older adults is shaped by capability, opportunity, and motivation factors. Effective and equitable digital health strategies must address infrastructural and literacy barriers, engage health care providers through training and co-design, and ensure multistakeholder involvement. This review highlights that greater attention to standardized reporting of demographic variables, especially gender and rurality, is essential in digital health research to support inclusive implementation.
PROSPERO International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews CRD42024586893; https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/view/CRD42024586893.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR2-https://doi.org/10.3399/bjgp25X742161.
患有慢性病的老年人是数字健康技术的主要受益者,但数字健康技术的采用情况仍不一致,尤其是在农村地区以及某些特定人群中,如老年女性。
本系统评价旨在确定患有慢性病的老年人采用数字健康技术的障碍和促进因素,特别关注城乡差异、协同设计以及与公平性相关的因素。
本次更新的评价在之前发表的评价基础上进行,将检索范围扩大到PsycArticles、Scopus、科学网和PubMed数据库,以查找2022年4月至2024年9月期间发表的研究。还纳入了2021年8月起的灰色文献。如果研究报告了年龄≥60岁的慢性病成年人采用数字健康技术的障碍或促进因素,则该研究符合纳入标准。研究结果被映射到能力、机会和动机-行为模型,并使用PROGRESS-Plus(居住地;种族、民族、文化和语言;职业;性别和性;宗教;教育;社会经济地位;以及社会资本加)公平框架进行分析。使用混合方法评价工具评估质量,所有结果均按照PRISMA(系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目)指南进行报告。
原始评价中的12项研究被保留,新增了17项新的同行评审研究,除灰色文献检索中确定的30份文献外,总共纳入29项研究。障碍包括数字素养有限以及身体和认知方面的挑战(能力);基础设施不足和可用性挑战(机会);以及隐私担忧、不信任和对现有护理的高度满意度(动机)。促进因素包括量身定制的培训和无障碍设计(能力)、医疗保健提供者的认可和混合护理模式(机会)以及对数字健康益处的认识(动机)。医疗保健提供者既是促进因素也是障碍,当他们积极参与并接受培训时对采用有积极影响,但当缺乏信心或参与时则会阻碍采用。城乡背景的比较分析因与公平性相关变量的报告不一致而受到限制。然而,灰色文献表明,农村用户面临额外的基础设施挑战,但对当地护理的满意度更高,这可能会降低他们采用数字技术的动机。在5%(3/59)的同行评审研究和灰色文献来源中观察到性别差异,老年女性的采用率较低且结果优先事项不同。协同设计提高了采用率,特别是当不仅涉及老年人,还涉及医疗保健提供者和社区利益相关者时。
老年人采用数字健康技术受到能力、机会和动机因素的影响。有效且公平的数字健康战略必须解决基础设施和素养障碍,通过培训和协同设计让医疗保健提供者参与进来,并确保多利益相关者的参与。本评价强调,在数字健康研究中,更加关注人口统计学变量(尤其是性别和农村地区)的标准化报告对于支持包容性实施至关重要。
PROSPERO国际前瞻性系统评价注册库CRD42024586893;https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/view/CRD42024586893。
国际注册报告标识符(IRRID):RR2-https://doi.org/10.3399/bjgp25X742161。