Application of mobile health technology in self-management of stroke patients: a scoping review
10.3760/cma.j.cn115682-20240429-02395
- VernacularTitle:移动健康技术在脑卒中患者自我管理中应用的范围综述
- Author:
Guangxin LIU
1
;
Ying XU
1
;
Yuzhen LI
1
;
Xia SUN
1
Author Information
1. 山东第一医科大学/山东省医学科学院护理学院,泰安 271016
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Stroke;
Mobile health technology;
Self-management;
Scoping review
- From:
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing
2024;30(35):4761-4767
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To conduct a scoping review of research on the application of mobile health technology in self-management for stroke patients, identifying the main types, content elements, outcome indicators, and effectiveness of mobile health technology to provide references for related research and clinical practice.Methods:Based on the Joanna Briggs Institute's scoping review guidelines, a search was conducted in Cochrane Library, PubMed, CINAHL, Embase, Web of Science, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang Data, and China Biology Medicine disc for Chinese and English literature on the use of mobile health technology in self-management of stroke patients, with a search timeframe up to December 31, 2023. Literature screening and data extraction were performed, and the included studies were summarized and analyzed.Results:A total of 18 studies were included. The main forms of mobile health technology used in stroke self-management included applications, social media, wearable devices, web platforms, and health management systems. Content areas covered knowledge provision and self-management skills, exercise management, speech management, medication management, daily activity management, health data monitoring, and communication with healthcare providers. Outcome indicators included self-management capability, physiological indicators, psychological indicators, feasibility indicators, and others.Conclusions:The application of mobile health technology in stroke self-management has shown promising results, but further verification is needed. Future work should establish an integrated "online+offline" intervention model, promote multidisciplinary team collaboration, focus on elderly patients, and conduct high-quality research to explore scientific, individualized mobile health technology intervention strategies to enhance disease recovery and improve quality of life.