美国农村癌症关联症状管理的前景:启动关联健康干预机会的叙述性回顾。

Journal of Appalachian health Pub Date : 2020-11-17 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.13023/jah.0204.08
Ming-Yuan Chih, Anna McCowan, Sadie Whittaker, Melinda Krakow, David K Ahern, Eliah Aronoff-Spencer, Bradford W Hesse, Timothy W Mullett, Robin C Vanderpool
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:2016年总统癌症小组呼吁开展项目,重点利用连接健康技术(宽带和电信)改善癌症症状管理。然而,像阿巴拉契亚的农村社区一样,农村社区可能会面临癌症发病率高、宽带接入率低以及联网医疗解决方案所需的采用率低的“双重负担”。目的:更好地了解美国农村癌症症状管理中的关联健康现状。方法:使用四个学术数据库(PubMed、CINAHL、MEDLINE和PsycINFO)进行文献检索,查找2010年至2019年发表的与美国农村关联癌症症状管理相关的文章。进行了文本筛选,以确定相关出版物。结果:在17项回顾性研究中,4项采用随机对照试验;其余的是在设计或小型试点项目中形成的。五项研究让农村社区的利益攸关方参与设计解决方案。最常见的研究症状是心理/情绪症状,其次是身体症状,尤其是疼痛。所使用的技术主要是基于电话的;很少有支持互联网的视频会议或基于网络的会议。先进的移动和基于互联网的方法通常处于开发阶段。总体而言,农村患者和医疗保健提供者都报告了对联网医疗技术的高度接受、使用和满意度。17项研究中有10项报告了症状管理结果的改善。总结了限制对调查结果进行解释的方法上的挑战。影响:审查确定需要让农村利益相关者参与开发和测试基于先进移动和宽带互联网技术的癌症症状管理解决方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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The Landscape of Connected Cancer Symptom Management in Rural America: A Narrative Review of Opportunities for Launching Connected Health Interventions.

Background: The 2016 President's Cancer Panel called for projects focusing on improving cancer symptom management using connected health technologies (broadband and telecommunications). However, rural communities, like those in Appalachia, may experience a "double burden" of high cancer rates and lower rates of broadband access and adoption necessary for connected health solutions.

Purpose: To better understand the current landscape of connected health in the management of cancer symptoms in rural America.

Methods: A literature search was conducted using four academic databases (PubMed, CINAHL, MEDLINE, and PsycINFO) to locate articles published from 2010 to 2019 relevant to connected cancer symptom management in rural America. Text screening was conducted to identify relevant publications.

Results: Among 17 reviewed studies, four were conducted using a randomized controlled trial; the remainder were formative in design or small pilot projects. Five studies engaged stakeholders from rural communities in designing solutions. Most commonly studied symptoms were psychological/emotional symptoms, followed by physical symptoms, particularly pain. Technologies used were primarily telephone-based; few were Internet-enabled video conferencing or web-based. Advanced mobile and Internet-based approaches were generally in the development phase. Overall, both rural patients and healthcare providers reported high acceptance, usage, and satisfaction of connected health technologies. Ten of the 17 studies reported improved symptom management outcomes. Methodological challenges that limited the interpretation of the findings were summarized.

Implications: The review identified a need to engage rural stakeholders to develop and test connected cancer symptom management solutions that are based on advanced mobile and broadband Internet technologies.

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