Nurse‐led remote digital support for adults with chronic conditions: A systematic synthesis without meta‐analysis

Author:

Kilfoy Alicia123ORCID,Chu Charlene14ORCID,Krisnagopal Archanaa1,Mcatee Enoch1,Baek Sunny1,Zworth Mallory12,Hwang Kyobin3,Park Hyun1,Jibb Lindsay123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

2. Division of Hematology/Oncology Hospital for Sick Children Toronto Ontario Canada

3. Child Health Evaluative Sciences Hospital for Sick Children Toronto Ontario Canada

4. KITE Research Institute University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractAimThe systematic review aims to synthesize the literature examining the effectiveness of nurse‐led remote digital support on health outcomes in adults with chronic conditions.BackgroundAdults with chronic diseases have increased rates of mortality and morbidity and use health care resources at a higher intensity than those without chronic conditions—placing strain on the patient, their caregivers and health systems. Nurse‐led digital health disease self‐management interventions have potential to improve outcomes for patients with chronic conditions by facilitating care in environments other that the hospital setting.Design and MethodsWe searched PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO and Cochrane Central databases from inception to 7 December 2022. We included randomized controlled trials assessing the impact of nurse‐led remote digital support interventions compared to usual care on health‐related outcomes in adults with chronic illness. The Cochrane risk‐of‐bias tool was used to assess bias in studies. Outcomes were organized into four categories: self‐management, clinical outcomes, health care resource use and satisfaction with care. Results are presented narratively based on statistical significance.ResultsForty‐four papers pertaining to 40 unique studies were included. Interventions most targeted diabetes (n = 11) and cardiovascular disease (n = 8). Websites (n = 10) and mobile applications (n = 10) were the most used digital modalities. Nurses supported patients either in response to incoming patient health data (n = 14), virtual appointment (n = 8), virtual health education (n = 5) or through a combination of these approaches (n = 13). Positive impacts of nurse‐led digital chronic disease support were identified in each outcome category. Mobile applications were the most effective digital modality.Conclusion and Relevance to Clinical PracticeResults show that nurse‐led remote digital support interventions significantly improve self‐management capacity, clinical health outcomes, health care resource use and satisfaction with care. Such interventions have potential to support overall health for adults with chronic conditions in their home environments.

Publisher

Wiley

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