| Literature DB >> 35357321 |
Laura Maaß1,2, Chen-Chia Pan2,3, Merle Freye2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rapid developments and implementation of digital technologies in public health domains throughout the last decades have changed the landscape of health delivery and disease prevention globally. A growing number of countries are introducing interventions such as online consultations, electronic health records, or telemedicine to their health systems to improve their populations' health and improve access to health care. Despite multiple definitions for digital public health and the development of different digital interventions, no study has analyzed whether the utilized technologies fit the definition or the core characteristics of digital public health interventions. A scoping review is therefore needed to explore the extent of the literature on this topic.Entities:
Keywords: digital public health; eConsultation; ePrescription; eReferral; eSurveillance; eVaccination registries; electronic health records; protocol; scoping review; telemedicine
Year: 2022 PMID: 35357321 PMCID: PMC9015775 DOI: 10.2196/33404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Figure 1The proposed landscape of digital public health intervention classification.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria of the scoping review.
| Level | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
| Population | The study focuses on the geographical community level or above (regional or national) | The study population consists of veterans, armed forces, prisoners, inmates, refugees, or asylum seekers |
| Intervention | The paper describes a concrete DiPHIa; the DiPHI is paid or reimbursed by the government or health insurance; the intervention uses the internet and/or Bluetooth to facilitate health care, allows communication between providers or providers and patients, promotes its users’ health, reuses the collected data for public health research, or enables digital surveillance of public health disasters | The paper offers a framework or overview of an intervention type but does not describe a concrete intervention in detail; the intervention does not use the internet, does not address public health functions, or needs to be privately bought by the user without reimbursement by the government or health insurance (ie, interventions for the private market); the intervention uses SMS text messaging or regular phone calls; the intervention focuses on background management processes; the described intervention does not match our definition of digital public health; the intervention targets only the individual user but not a group of people; the digital public health intervention is not the central research object of the publication |
| Study design | All original peer-reviewed studies, reports, books, book chapters, or peer-reviewed conference papers that have a description of a DiPHI as their primary intervention component | Study protocols, editorials, commentaries, conference proceedings, or reviews (narrative reviews, scoping reviews, systematic reviews, or meta-analyses); not peer-reviewed conference papers or original studies |
| Accessibility | The paper is available on the internet or after contact with the authors | The full text is not available on the internet or after contact with the authors |
| Language | The paper is published in English, Chinese, or German | The paper is published in a language other than English, Chinese, or German |
aDiPHI: digital public health intervention.
Figure 2Flow chart of the search and screening process. ACM: Association for Computing Machinery; CENTRAL: Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials; IEEE: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.
Figure 3Short version of the search strategy. mHealth: mobile health.
Example table of core characteristics for a given intervention group based on electronic health records.
| Study | Characteristic 1 | Characteristic 2 | Characteristic 3 | Characteristic 4 |
| Study 1 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
|
| Study 2 |
| ✓ |
| ✓ |
| Study 3 | ✓ |
| ✓ | ✓ |