| Literature DB >> 35162546 |
Zhen Liu1, Lingfeng Ren1, Chang Xiao1, Ke Zhang1, Peter Demian2.
Abstract
Health 4.0 aligns with Industry 4.0 and encourages the application of the latest technologies to healthcare. Virtual reality (VR) is a potentially significant component of the Health 4.0 vision. Though VR in health care is a popular topic, there is little knowledge of VR-aided therapy from a macro perspective. Therefore, this paper was aimed to explore the research of VR in aiding therapy, thus providing a potential guideline for futures application of therapeutic VR in healthcare towards Health 4.0. A mixed research method was adopted for this research, which comprised the use of a bibliometric analysis (a quantitative method) to conduct a macro overview of VR-aided therapy, the identification of significant research structures and topics, and a qualitative review of the literature to reveal deeper insights. Four major research areas of VR-aided therapy were identified and investigated, i.e., post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety and fear related disorder (A&F), diseases of the nervous system (DNS), and pain management, including related medical conditions, therapies, methods, and outcomes. This study is the first to use VOSviewer, a commonly used software tool for constructing and visualizing bibliometric networks and developed by Center for Science and Technology Studies, Leiden University, the Netherlands, to conduct bibliometric analyses on VR-aided therapy from the perspective of Web of Science core collection (WoSc), which objectively and visually shows research structures and topics, therefore offering instructive insights for health care stakeholders (particularly researchers and service providers) such as including integrating more innovative therapies, emphasizing psychological benefits, using game elements, and introducing design research. The results of this paper facilitate with achieving the vision of Health 4.0 and illustrating a two-decade (2000 to year 2020) map of pre-life of the Health Metaverse.Entities:
Keywords: Health 4.0; Health Metaverse; VOSviewer; anxiety and fear related disorder (A&F); bibliometric; diseases of the nervous system (DNS); health care; pain management; post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD); therapy; virtual reality
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35162546 PMCID: PMC8834834 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19031525
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The flow chart of the research methodology.
Figure 2Network visualization of bibliographic coupling analysis of the theme of virtual reality (VR) and therapy in the Web of Science core collection (WoSc) database via VOSviewer (devised and generated by the authors).
Figure 3Density visualization of bibliographic coupling analysis of the theme of VR and therapy in the WoSc via VOSviewer (devised and generated by the authors).
Figure 4Overlay visualizations of bibliographic coupling analysis of the theme of VR and therapy within two decades (2000 to year 2020) in the WoSc via VOSviewer (devised and generated by the authors).
The representative articles of each cluster in Figure 2 for virtual reality (VR) aided therapy (devised by the authors).
| Cluster | Author | Year | Research Method | Research Subject | Medical Condition | Therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Marco et al. | 2013 | Controlled study | Women | Eating disorders | Body image treatment using Virtual reality |
| Riva et al. | 2002 | Controlled study | Adult women | Eating disorders | Multidimensional virtual reality treatment | |
| Ferrer-garcia et al. | 2017 | Randomized Controlled Comparison | Adults | Eating disorders | Virtual reality cue exposure therapy | |
| 2 | Hoffman et al. | 2000 | Case study (self-report) | Adults | Burn pain | Virtual-reality-aided physical therapy |
| Schmitt et al. | 2011 | Randomized, controlled trial | Teenagers | Burn pain | Virtual-reality-aided physical therapy | |
| Hoffman et al. | 2014 | Case study | Teenagers | Burn pain | Occupational therapy with virtual reality | |
| 3 | Rizzo et al. | 2005 | SWOT analysis | Unclear | Rehabilitation | Unspecified |
| Bohil et al. | 2011 | Literature review | Unclear | Neuroscience related | Unspecified | |
| Lohse et al. | 2014 | Systematic review | Unclear | Post-stroke | Custom built virtual environments and commercially available gaming systems. | |
| 4 | Rothbaum et al. | 2001 | Open clinical trial | Vietnam combat veterans | Post-traumatic stress disorder | Virtual reality exposure therapy |
| Rothbaum et al. | 2014 | Controlled randomized clinical trial | Iraq and Afghanistan veterans | Post-traumatic stress disorder | Virtual reality exposure with drugs | |
| Difede et al. | 2007 | Controlled trial | Civilians and disaster workers | Post-traumatic stress disorder | Virtual reality exposure therapy | |
| 5 | Parsons et al. | 2008 | A meta-analysis | Unclear | Anxiety and specific phobias | Virtual reality exposure therapy |
| Powers et al. | 2008 | A meta-analysis | Unclear | Anxiety and specific phobias | Virtual reality exposure therapy | |
| Rothbaum et al. | 2006 | Controlled clinical trial | Unclear | Fear of flying | Virtual reality exposure therapy | |
| 6 | Opris et al. | 2012 | A meta-analysis | Unclear | Anxiety disorders | Virtual reality exposure therapy |
| Morina et al. | 2015 | Case study | College students | Anxiety disorders | Virtual reality exposure therapy | |
| Carl et al. | 2019 | A meta-analysis | Unclear | Anxiety disorders | Virtual reality exposure therapy | |
| 7 | Botella et al. | 2017 | Systematic review | Unclear | Phobias | Virtual reality exposure therapy |
| Freeman et al. | 2018 | Randomized trial | Adults | Fear of heights | Virtual reality cognitive intervention | |
| Lindner et al. | 2017 | Literature review | Unclear | Anxiety disorders | Virtual reality exposure therapy |
Figure 5Four ranges in two decades (2000 to year 2020) of overlay visualizations of bibliographic coupling analysis of the theme of VR and therapy in the WoSc via VOSviewer (devised and generated by the authors).
The most frequent terms on the theme of VR and therapy in the Web of Science core collection (WoSc) database calculated by VOSviewer (devised by the authors).
| Rank | Term | Occurrences |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Virtual reality exposure therapy | 94 |
| 2 | Exposure therapy | 46 |
| 3 | Virtual reality therapy | 43 |
| 4 | Test | 41 |
| 5 | PTSD | 38 |
| 6 | Rehabilitation | 35 |
| 7 | Control group | 33 |
| 8 | Anxiety disorder | 31 |
| 9 | Post-traumatic stress disorder | 28 |
| 10 | Phobia | 28 |
Figure 6Network visualization of term co-occurrence analysis of the theme of VR and therapy within two decades (2000 to year 2020) in the WoSc database via VOSviewer (devised and generated by the authors).
Categorized terms associated with post-traumatic stress disorder from Figure 6 (devised by the authors).
| Medical Condition | Therapy | Method | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| IRAP, combat, veteran, active duty soldier, anxiety symptom, cognitive function, post-traumatic stress, PTSD, PTSD symptom, stress disorder | Course, exposure therapy, imaginal exposure, post-treatment, pretreatment, prolonged exposure, virtual reality exposure (VRE) | Case report | Engagement, frequency, immersion, potential benefit, significant change |
Categorized terms associated with anxiety and fear related disorder from Figure 6 (devised by the authors).
| Medical Condition | Therapy | Method | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Avoidance, depressive symptom, distress, panic disorder, paranoia, phobia, public speaking anxiety, sad, social anxiety, social anxiety disorder, social phobia, social situation, specific phobia, spider | Post-treatment, pre-treatment, virtual reality cognitive, virtual reality exposure, vivo, vivo exposure, vivo exposure therapy, VR CBT, VR exposure, VR exposure therapy, VRET session | Control condition, heart rate, self-reporting | Availability, effect size, effective treatment, extent, low cost, relaxation, significant reduction, wide range |
Categorized terms associated with diseases of the nervous system (DNS) from Figure 6 (devised by the authors).
| Medical Condition | Therapy | Method | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adult, balance, cerebral palsy, child, children, gait, motor, motor function, motor rehabilitation, movement, stroke, upper limb | Conventional therapy, post intervention, VR therapy, VR group, VR intervention | Berg balance scale, control group, experimental group, Fugl Meyer assessment, randomized clinical trial, systematic review, meta-analysis, test | Duration, mobility, motivation, participation, performance, positive effect, significant improvement, significant result |
Categorized terms associated with pain management (PM) from Figure 6 (devised by the authors).
| Medical Condition | Therapy | Method | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Burn patient, chronic, female, pain | Attention, distraction, exercise, immersive virtual reality, physical therapy, VR session | Case study | Average, preliminary evidence, range, side effect |