| Literature DB >> 34797214 |
Geetanjali Rajamani1, Patricia Rodriguez Espinosa2, Lisa G Rosas2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The exponential growth of health information technology has the potential to facilitate community engagement in research. However, little is known about the use of health information technology in community-engaged research, such as which types of health information technology are used, which populations are engaged, and what are the research outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: community engagement; health inequities; health informatics; health information technology; health-related research; stakeholder involvement; underserved communities
Year: 2021 PMID: 34797214 PMCID: PMC8663666 DOI: 10.2196/30062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Particip Med ISSN: 2152-7202
Figure 1Screening process. CEnR: community-engaged research; PCORI: Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.
Population demographics by community engagement strategies.
|
| Demographic details | Study location | Reference |
|
| |||
|
|
| ||
|
| K-12 children, Low socioeconomic status | Colorado | [ |
|
| K-12 children, Low socioeconomic status | Colorado | [ |
|
| >18 years, Varying health literacy | Washington Heights/Inwood region, New York City | [ |
|
| Providers affiliated with a major health system | Southeast Minnesota | [ |
|
| People of color | Harlem, New York | [ |
|
| >18 years, Varying levels of health literacy | New York | [ |
|
| 18-29 years | San Francisco Bay Area | [ |
|
| Adults with serious mental illnesses | Massachusetts | [ |
|
| Median age 27 years, Sexual (98%) and gender (15%) minority | —a | [ |
|
| Gender minority (n=3813) | Across the United States | [ |
|
|
| ||
|
| Pregnant women with type 1 diabetes | Sweden | [ |
|
| Stakeholders and clinicians | University of Washington | [ |
|
| Stakeholders and health care providers | Netherlands | [ |
|
| Racial minority (90%); low socioeconomic status | New York | [ |
|
| 58% to 200% of the federal poverty level | Chicago | [ |
|
| Addresses a spectrum of underrepresented minorities | — | [ |
|
| Black/African American; resource-limited neighborhood | Washington, D.C. | [ |
|
| Young adults and teenagers, Black/African American | — | [ |
|
|
| ||
|
| Parents of children <8 years, Hispanic; low socioeconomic status | New Mexico | [ |
|
| Mean 18.4 years; 66% female , 80% Black/African American | — | [ |
|
| Patients with end-stage renal disease | Baltimore, Maryland | [ |
|
| 14-24 years; 71% female, Black/African American | Michigan | [ |
|
| American Indian/Alaska Native College students | Kansas, Missouri | [ |
|
| >50 years, Women; Black/African American; with HIVc | Baltimore-Washington metropolitan area | [ |
|
| Marginalized communities (patients with history of | — | [ |
|
| 51-74 years, Black/African American women; high cardiovascular disease | Washington, DC | [ |
|
| |||
|
|
| ||
|
| >65 years; 75% female, Low socioeconomic status homes for older adults | San Mateo County | [ |
|
| Mean 64 years | 4 rural communities in New York | [ |
|
| 50+ years | Haifa, Israel | [ |
|
| Adults and adolescents, Hispanic (low- or middle-income country) | Mexico | [ |
|
| Adolescents and older adults, Latino; low socioeconomic status | North Fair Oaks, California | [ |
|
| >18 years, Racially or ethnically diverse; low socioeconomic status; food insecure | San Mateo | [ |
|
| >18 years, High rates of poverty or unemployment | Camden, New Jersey | [ |
|
| >18 years, Chronic stress environment | Bay Area, California | [ |
|
| >65 years | Queensland, Australia | [ |
|
| Multi-ethnic community residents from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds | Bogota, Colombia; San Francisco, United States; and Temuco, Chile | [ |
|
| Elementary and middle school students, Low-density areas | Santa Clara | [ |
aData not available.
bOther techniques included person-centered web support, community engagement and stakeholder-focused interviews, and clinic-community linkages
cHIV: human immunodeficiency virus.
Extent of community engagement.
| Community engagement phase | Studies utilizing community engagement in this phase, na | Reference |
| Contribute to research priority | 7 | [ |
| Offer feedback on HITb design or prototype | 26 | [ |
| Recruit participants for research | 6 | [ |
| Collect data using HIT tool | 21 | [ |
| Review study results | 13 | [ |
| Engage in advocacy or dissemination | 13 | [ |
aStudies could be categorized into multiple categories.
bHIT: health information technology.
Technology interventions used in studies.
| Type of technology | Studies utilizing this technology, n | Reference |
| Infographic | 2 | [ |
| Data integration site | 2 | [ |
| Sensor or multimedia | 3 | [ |
| Data sharing portal | 3 | [ |
| Website | 10 | [ |
| Tablet or mobile app | 17 | [ |
Outcomes of interest using health information technology supported community engagement techniques.
| Category | Outcomes of interest |
| Elicit user needs and requirements |
Youth use of information communication technologies, their communication about sexuality and HIVa/STIsb [ Design health intervention technologies for low socioeconomic status communities [ Culturally appropriate informatics intervention for HIV/STI prevention [ Describe stakeholder practices and challenges in genomic integration for personalized medicine [ Guide for business modeling with stakeholder-oriented analysis for eHealth implementations [ Provide support for pregnant diabetic women [ Gather requirements for developing visuals and infographics [ Inform development of HIV app for older adult women [ |
| Assess health information technology tools and prototypes with participants |
Mobile phone prototype for usability and usefulness in low socioeconomic status contexts [ Website with tailored chronic illness content to consumers of color [ Community engaged health informatics platform or website with participatory functionality [ Develop tailored infographics to engage viewer and motivate healthy behaviors [ Web analytics research platform to share data and engage in research [ Culturally sensitive participatory approach app to increase intervention adoption [ Acceptability of WYZ health app in youth living with HIV to improve HIV care [ Effectiveness of mobile app to engage and recruit sexual and gender minority [ Mobile app for adults with serious mental illnesses [ Health information exchange and patient data portal for population health [ Referral to community resources and system use [ Feasibility of digital research platform to recruit & retain sexual and gender minority [ Feasibility of participatory approach–monitoring wristbands in resource limited settings [ |
| Measure knowledge |
Participants’ knowledge of preschool children mental health [ Perceptions and attitudes on internet use and health info needs for American Indian or Alaska Native individuals [ Assess comprehension of renal replacement therapy knowledge [ Promote future workforce training and mobile platform for health research [ |
| Advocate for community change |
Neighborhood elements that affect active living [ Neighborhood barriers in low- or middle-income country settings [ Barriers and solutions for food access and food behaviors [ Elements that affect active living in a neighborhood in Australia [ Healthy corner store network effectiveness for healthy food access [ Elements of environment contributing to chronic stress [ Effectiveness of Open Streets initiative to modify neighborhood [ Feasibility of active and safe commuting to school [ Elements affecting active living in rural settings [ Elements affecting active living in an Israel city [ Elements affecting active living in Latino neighborhood [ |
aHIV: human immunodeficiency virus.
bSTIs: sexually transmitted infections.