| Literature DB >> 36279007 |
Inke R König1, Mirja Mittermaier2,3, Christian Sina4, Matthias Raspe2, Patrick Stais5, Thomas Gamstätter6, Philipp Stachwitz6, Sebastian Wolfrum7, Jutta G Richter8, Martin Möckel9.
Abstract
Since 2020, digital health applications (DiGA) can be prescribed at the expense of the German statutory health insurance (SHI) system after undergoing an approval procedure by the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (BfArM). DiGA can be approved provisionally for 1 year (with the option of extension) or permanently. The latter is dependent on scientific evidence of a positive effect on care, which can be a medical benefit or a patient-relevant structural and procedural improvement in care. However, it is apparent that the investigation of DiGA in scientific studies is challenging, as they are often complex interventions whose success also includes user and prescriber factors. In addition, health services research data underpinning the benefits of DiGA are lacking to date. In the current article, methodological considerations for DiGA research are presented, and a selection of internal medicine DiGAs is used to critically discuss current research practice.Entities:
Keywords: Digital health applications/internal medicine; Health services research; Medical benefit; Patient-relevant structural and procedural improvement; Study design
Year: 2022 PMID: 36279007 DOI: 10.1007/s00108-022-01429-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inn Med (Heidelb) ISSN: 2731-7080