| Literature DB >> 35834301 |
Brandi Leach1, Sarah Parkinson1, Evangelos Gkousis1, Gary Abel2, Helen Atherton3, John Campbell2, Christopher Clark2, Emma Cockcroft2, Christine Marriott4, Emma Pitchforth2, Jon Sussex1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of web-based services within primary care (PC) in the National Health Service in England is increasing, with medically underserved populations being less likely to engage with web-based services than other patient groups. Digital facilitation-referring to a range of processes, procedures, and personnel that seek to support patients in the uptake and use of web-based services-may be a way of addressing these challenges. However, the models and impact of digital facilitation currently in use are unclear.Entities:
Keywords: digital facilitation; primary care; web-based health services
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35834301 PMCID: PMC9335178 DOI: 10.2196/33911
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 7.076
Figure 1Flow of the literature review process.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for the screening process.
| Stage of process and criteria | Include | Exclude | |
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| Scale and spread of intervention | At all scales and geographic levels from the individual site to national coverage | None |
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| Country | EEAa countries or non-European high-income countries (defined as membership in OECDb) | Countries not in the EEA or OECD |
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| Language | English | Languages other than English |
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| Availability | Full-text availability | Title and abstract only and conference proceedings with no full-text article |
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| Year of publication | 2015 to January 2020 | 2014 or earlier |
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| Year of publication | 2010 to January 2020 | 2009 or earlier |
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| Topic relevance | Digital facilitation of web-based services in primary health care settings; where digital facilitation was implemented in some form: implementation as part of routine service delivery or implementation for research purposes | Where there was no reference to facilitation being implemented by or on behalf of primary care practices; thus, solely theoretical papers were excluded |
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| Article type | Original research | Theoretical and commentary articles; trial registrations (ie, articles registered on ClinicalTrials.gov or the WHO ICTRPc registry) |
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| Topic relevance | Digital facilitation of web-based services in non–primary care health sectors; where digital facilitation was implemented in some form: implementation as part of routine service delivery or implementation for research purposes; articles addressing aspects of digital facilitation found not to be covered by articles identified in stage 1; key gaps include evaluations of digital facilitation approaches, cost-effectiveness, and effectiveness of digital facilitation approaches for vulnerable populations | Where there was no reference to facilitation being implemented by or on behalf of health care providers; thus, solely theoretical papers were excluded; articles addressing aspects of digital facilitation already covered by the included articles identified in stage 1 |
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| Article type | Original research | Theoretical and commentary articles and trial registrations (ie, articles registered on ClinicalTrials.gov or the WHO ICTRP registry) |
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| Topic relevance | Digital facilitation of web-based services in health care, all sectors; articles addressing aspects of digital facilitation found not to be covered by articles identified in stage 1; key gaps include the following: implications of COVID-19 pandemic for digital facilitation, evaluations of digital facilitation approaches, and effectiveness of digital facilitation approaches for vulnerable populations | Where there was no reference to facilitation being implemented by or on behalf of health care providers; thus, solely theoretical papers were excluded; articles addressing aspects of digital facilitation already covered by the included articles identified in stage 1 |
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| Article type | Gray literature (ie, literature produced in electronic and print formats outside of commercial publishing), including but not limited to government documents or reports, policy reports, research reports, and working papers | Trial registrations (ie, articles registered on ClinicalTrials.gov or the WHO ICTRP registry) |
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| Article type | Original research | Theoretical and commentary articles and trial registrations (ie, articles registered on ClinicalTrials.gov or the WHO ICTRP registry) |
aEEA: European Economic Area.
bOECD: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
cWHO ICTRP: World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform.
Figure 2PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Item For Systematic Review And Meta-Analyses) flow diagram of literature review.
Typology of digital facilitation approaches.
| Typology of digital facilitation | Definition | Examples of facilitation approaches | |||
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| Promotion | Broad category of digital facilitation that captures ways of raising awareness of and knowledge about digital services, endorsements of specific digital services to patients, and methods of encouraging patients to use them | Recommendation and prescription of digital services and other communication-centered interventions; emails and written reminders; video introductions to digital services | ||
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| Training and education | Education or training to help patients acquire technical skills to use digital services or to help patients understand what features of a digital service can be most helpful to them | Initial assistance with the use of digital services | ||
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| Guidance and support | Ongoing help in using digital services provided by clinicians or other primary care staff to patients | Coaching and ongoing guidance from clinicians and other staff | ||
| Digital facilitation aimed at primary care staff | Interventions aimed at primary care staff, typically to increase staff’s knowledge of digital services so that they can better support patients in their use of the services or to increase their trust in services to increase the likelihood of staff promoting the service to patients | Certified list of apps and websites (to be able to recommend to patients); practice champions (to increase buy-in); training for providers (to generate awareness of web-based services and how to use them) | |||
Evidence on increasing uptake and use of types of digital facilitation approaches.
| Typology and digital facilitation effort | Evidence for increasing uptake and use | ||
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| Recommendation or prescription of digital service to patient |
Staff recommendation or endorsement of a digital service was shown to be one of the most effective ways of increasing patient uptake and use in 2 literature reviews on the topic [ There is strong evidence from RCTsa supporting that prescription and referral pads for digital services are effective in increasing patient uptake [ There is some evidence that a list of certified apps and websites (approved by a regulating body) may be effective in enabling providers to prescribe apps and websites to patients [ Multiple mixed methods studies suggest that recommendation or endorsement of digital services may be more effective when staff focus on specific aspects of digital service, which will be useful to particular patients, and gradually introduce patients to digital services based on their individual needs at that time [ | |
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| Communication-centered interventions |
Qualitative evidence and evidence from an RCT suggest that recommendation or endorsement of digital services may be more effective when staff are trained in how to best engage patients using specific communication strategies and shared messaging around the service [ There is strong evidence from 3 RCTs that interventions that help patients form specific “if-then” plans to use digital services are effective in increasing the continued use of digital services [ | |
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| Email and written reminders |
Mixed methods and qualitative studies have shown that written materials such as brochures, leaflets, and advertisements may be effective in increasing patient use of digital services and are useful in that they require little effort from providers [ Reminders (eg, SMS text messages and push notifications) have been implemented in some areas [ | |
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| Video introductions to digital services |
There is mixed evidence from RCTs on whether video introductions are effective in increasing the uptake of digital services. There is no evidence to support they are effective in increasing the sustained use of digital services [ | |
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| Public information campaigns |
In the United Kingdom, a public information campaign and personalized invitations to invite patients to use an electronic health record system were found to be ineffective in encouraging enrollment [ | |
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| Initial assistance with use of digital services |
There is mixed evidence from RCTs and quantitative studies on whether initial assistance in registering and logging into digital services is effective in increasing uptake and use [ There is qualitative evidence suggesting that allowing patients to log into and use digital services in primary care practices (eg, in the waiting room on tablets) may be effective in encouraging patients to continue using a service outside of the practice [ | |
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| Technical training support |
There is a body of literature (including strong evidence from a systematic review and an RCT) emphasizing the importance of technical support for using digital services and wider support for digital literacy and digital health literacy in encouraging patient use of digital services, [ | |
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| Coaching and ongoing guidance for patients |
There is mixed evidence from RCTs and nonrandomized trials on whether ongoing coaching and support is broadly effective in increasing uptake and sustained use of digital services [ There is strong evidence from 3 RCTs suggesting that ongoing guidance focused on adherence, content of digital services and goal setting are likely more effective than ongoing guidance on only technical aspects of digital services in increasing the use of digital services [ Qualitative evidence suggests that both face-to-face and telephone support is likely important in encouraging patients to continue to use digital services [ | |
aRCT: randomized controlled trial.
bNHS: National Health Service.