电子健康技术与非医生卫生工作者相结合,改善高血压管理的干预措施:系统回顾与荟萃分析

Rajshree Thapa, W. Takele, Amanda Thrift, Aysegul Zengin
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摘要

高血压是一个重大的公共卫生问题,每年造成全球 750 万人死亡和 5700 万人残疾调整寿命。大多数与高血压相关的死亡发生在中低收入国家。尽管许多中低收入国家的高血压发病率不断攀升,但只有三分之一的患者知道自己患有高血压。电子健康技术的迅速普及为改善高血压的检测和管理提供了机会。许多低收入和中等收入国家严重缺乏医生,而他们的服务往往要花费医疗系统相当大的成本。非医师卫生工作者可以成为一种具有成本效益的替代方案,以改善高血压的检测和管理,尤其是在低收入国家和地区。在本系统综述中,我们旨在综合评估将电子健康技术与非医生卫生工作者相结合以降低血压的干预措施的有效性。非医生卫生工作者正在使用各种电子健康技术来管理高血压,如移动应用程序、远程监测、短信和电子决策支持系统。我们发现,与常规护理相比,电子健康技术与非医生卫生工作者的整合使总体平均收缩压降低了-4.09 mmHg(95%CI:-5.87 至-2.32)。同样,这种综合方法也使干预组的舒张压比常规护理降低了-1.25 mmHg(-2.31 至-0.81)。因此,利用具有成本效益的电子健康技术来支持与非医生的任务分担,是加强血压管理的有效策略,适用于高收入和低收入国家。
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Interventions of eHealth technologies integrated with non-physician health workers for improving management of hypertension: Systematic review and meta-analysis
Hypertension is a major public health problem, accounting for 7.5 million deaths and 57 million disability-adjusted life years annually worldwide. The majority of hypertension-related deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Despite the escalating prevalence of hypertension in many LMICs, only one-third of those affected are aware of their hypertension status. The rapid proliferation of eHealth technologies presents an opportunity to improve the detection and management of hypertension. Many LMICs face a critical shortage of physicians, and their services often come at a considerable cost to the health system. Non-physician health workers could be a cost-effective alternative to improve the detection and management of hypertension, particularly in LMICs. In this systematic review, we aim to synthesize and evaluate the effectiveness of interventions that integrated eHealth technologies with non-physician health workers to reduce blood pressure. A diverse range of eHealth technologies, such as mobile-based applications, telemonitoring, short text messaging and electronic decision support systems, are being used by non-physician health workers for the management of hypertension. We found that eHealth technologies integrated with non-physician health workers reduced overall mean systolic blood pressure by -4.09 mmHg (95%CI: -5.87 to -2.32) compared to usual care. Similarly, such an integrated approach also reduced diastolic blood pressure by -1.25 mmHg (-2.31 to -0.81) in the intervention group than usual care. Therefore, leveraging the use of cost-effective eHealth technologies to support task-sharing with non-physicians presents an effective strategy for enhancing blood pressure management, applicable to both high- and low-income countries.
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