| Literature DB >> 27877126 |
Auriane Gros1, David Bensamoun2, Valeria Manera3, Roxane Fabre4, Anne-Marie Zacconi-Cauvin3, Susanne Thummler3, Michel Benoit2, Philippe Robert5, Renaud David5.
Abstract
Objective: Affective disorders are frequently encountered among elderly populations, and the use of information and communication technologies (ICT) could provide an added value for their recognition and assessment in addition to current clinical methods. The diversity and lack of consensus in the emerging field of ICTs is however a strong limitation for their global use in daily practice. The aim of the present article is to provide recommendations for the use of ICTs for the assessment and management of affective disorders among elderly populations with or without dementia.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; affective disorders; anxiety; dementia; depression; elderly; information and communication technology; serious games
Year: 2016 PMID: 27877126 PMCID: PMC5099137 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2016.00269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats (SWOT).
| Strenghts | Weaknesses |
|---|---|
| Objective evaluation | Devices too sophisticated and complicated to use |
| Interface adapted and tailored to the user, | Expensive equipments |
| Possibility to use at home | Addiction. |
| Real-time feedback delivery for the user and the professionals | Risk of overdiagnosis |
| Improve screening and early diagnosis, improvement of mass screening | Risk to induce new symptoms for advanced dementia stage (anxiety, delirium, persecution) |
| Possibility to provide prolonged or continuous evaluation | Risk of decreasing social, familial and outdoors activities |
| Geographic equity | Ethical challenges |
| Adapted to the new generations | Perception that ICT will replace clinicians, disappearance of human relations |
| Provide homogeneous therapeutic actions in care structures, provide therapeutic actions on patients’ living place | Negative representation (intrusive devices and privation violation) |
| Possibility to provide professional training | Risk of standardization, separate affective disorders from temper, personal history, traumatic life events |
| Embedded physiological measure of affective symptoms (respiratory and heartbeat, sudation, …) | Lack of consensus on specific markers for affective disorders |
Use of information and communication technologies (ICT) in the general population.
Figure 1Relevance of information and communication technologies (ICT) for different affective/emotional disorders.