| Literature DB >> 32329745 |
Abdelaziz Elnaggar1, Van Ta Park1, Sei J Lee2, Melinda Bender3, Lee Anne Siegmund4, Linda G Park1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient engagement with diabetes self-care is critical to reducing morbidity and mortality. Social media is one form of digital health that is available for diabetes self-care, although its use for peer-to-peer communication has not been systematically described, and its potential to support patient self-care is unclear.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes mellitus; peer group; self-care; social media; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32329745 PMCID: PMC7210496 DOI: 10.2196/14209
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Flow chart of study selection process.
Studies on the use of social media among patients for self-care.
| References and country | Target condition and age group (years) of participants | Study design and sample size | Exposure/intervention of experimental groups | Form of social media used and purpose | Outcome measures | Results |
| Grosberg et al [ | DMa, chronic pain, hypertension, and depression (15-≥60) | Cross-sectional and prospective cohort (3 months), N=686 | Active participation in a Hebrew-only website designed for chronic conditions | Discussions and blogs: | Personal Involvement in Health Care Related to Site Use, PAMb | At baseline, experienced users had higher PAM scores (mean 69.3, SD 19.1; PAM level 4; |
| Iafusco et al [ | T1Dc (10-18), mean age: 13.6 (SD 2.7) chat group, 14.1 (SD 2.3) control | Prospective cohort (2 years), N=396 | Online group messaging once a week for 90 min | Group chatting: I Seek You program for educational purposes and social support | DQOLYd and HbA1ce | The intervention group showed significant improvements in all 3 subscales of DQOLY compared with the control: impact of diabetes (mean 75, SD 7 vs mean 81, SD 14; |
| Magnezi et al [ | DM, CVDf, kidney disease, spinal cord injury, depression/anxiety (20-≥65) | Cross-sectional, N=296 | Active participation in a Hebrew-only website designed for chronic conditions | Discussions and blogs: | Perceived Usefulness of Online Groups, PAM-13 | Perceived usefulness was significantly higher in the 20-29 age group (mean 2.26, SD 1.24) than 50-64 age group (mean 1.43, SD 1.18; |
| Nelakurthi et al [ | Type 1, type 2, and unspecified type DM, ≥18 (mean age 57, SD 14) | Cross-sectional, N=212 | Visiting DM—specific social networking websites | DM—specific social networking websites | Following advice regarding eating habits, exercise habits, and lifestyle changes related to diabetes | Website users showed a significant correlation between offering advice and applying it to their own eating habits ( |
| Newton et al [ | T1D (13-18) | RCTg, N=50 | Standard medical care plus website participation (7 weeks) | Discussion, blogs, and group chatting: | DQOLY, Self-Efficacy of Diabetes Self-Management, and Outcome Expectations of Diabetes Self-Management | No significant differences between the control and intervention group on Quality of Life ( |
| Petrovski et al [ | T1D (11-25), mean age: noninternet group 15.2 (SD 2.9), internet group 16.4 (SD 1.9) | Cross-sectional and retrospective cohort, N=728 | Participating members in a national closed Facebook group | Discussion and blogs: Facebook, better blood glucose control, and social support | HbA1c (%), HbA1c (mmol/mol), diabetes ketoacidosis per patient/year, severe hypoglycemia per patient/year, and total daily insulin | Significant differences in the Facebook group between HbA1c (%) and HbA1c (mmol/mol; mean 7.1, SD 3.2 and mean 54, SD 35, respectively) compared with the control (mean 7.6, SD 2.8 and mean 60, SD 31, respectively; |
| Oser et al [ | T1D (≥18) | Cross-sectional, N=282 | Only passive readers of T1D-related blogs with no active contribution, insulin pump use, and CGMh | T1D-related blogs | HbA1c (%) | HbA1c levels of blog users were significantly lower than nonusers (7.0% vs 7.5%; |
aDM: diabetes mellitus.
bPAM: Patient Activation Measure.
cT1D: type 1 diabetes.
dDQOLY: Diabetes Quality of Life for Youth Inventory.
eHbA1c: glycated hemoglobin.
fCVD:cardiovascular disease
gRCT: randomized controlled trial.
hCGM: continuous glucose monitor.