Provision of Digital Primary Health Care Services: Overview of Reviews.

Publication date: Oct 29, 2024

Digital health is a growing field, and many digital interventions have been implemented on a large scale since the COVID-19 pandemic, mainly in primary health care (PHC). The development of digital health interventions and their application in PHC are encouraged by the World Health Organization. The increased number of published scientific papers on this topic has resulted in an overwhelming amount of information, but there is no overview of reviews to summarize this evidence. This study aims to provide policy makers, health managers, and researchers with a summary of evidence on digital interventions used in PHC. This overview of reviews searched the Web of Science and MEDLINE databases for systematic and scoping reviews on assessments of digital technologies implemented in PHC published from January 2007 to March 2023. Only reviews that addressed digital interventions whose targets were real patients or health care providers (HCPs) were included. A total of 236 records were identified from the search strategy, of which 42 (17. 8%) full-text papers were selected for analysis, and 18 (7. 6%) reviews met the eligibility criteria. In total, 61% (11/18) of the reviews focused their analysis on specific digital health interventions (client-to-provider telemedicine, provider-to-provider telemedicine, health worker decision support systems, systems for tracking patients’ health status, client participation and self-care platforms, and provision of education and training to health workers), and 39% (7/18) of the reviews focused on specific topics related to PHC (preventive care, chronic disease management, behavioral health disorders, the COVID-19 pandemic, multicomponent PHC interventions, and care coordination). Most studies in the included reviews agreed on barriers to implementation, such as software and apps developed without involving end users, the lack of training of HCPs and patients in digital technology use, and the lack of reimbursement and billing strategies for remote consultations. However, they showed several mixed results related to health service quality and patients’ clinical conditions and behavior changes. Research in digital health applied to PHC is still concentrated in high-income countries, mainly in North America and Europe. The mixed results related to health service quality and patients’ clinical conditions or behavior changes may have been caused by deficiencies in the process of implementing digital interventions. It is necessary to examine the entire impact pathway and the causal relationship among implementation, health service quality, and clinical condition outcomes to support the spread of digital health in PHC settings.

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Concepts Keywords
Apps COVID-19
Increased digital health
January digital skills
Medline Digital Technology
Pandemic health service quality
Humans
implementation
mobile phone
Pandemics
patients’ clinical conditions
Primary Health Care
primary health care
SARS-CoV-2
Telemedicine

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
drug DRUGBANK Methionine
disease MESH health status
disease MESH chronic disease
disease IDO quality
disease IDO process
drug DRUGBANK Ribostamycin
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease MESH diabetes mellitus
disease MESH prediabetes
disease MESH cardiovascular risks
disease IDO country
disease IDO production
disease IDO intervention
disease MESH aids
disease MESH privacy
drug DRUGBANK Cholesterol
disease IDO blood
disease MESH asthma
pathway KEGG Asthma
disease MESH hyperlipidemia
disease MESH hypertension
disease MESH uncertainty
disease MESH respiratory tract infection
disease IDO antibiotic resistance
disease MESH colorectal cancer
pathway KEGG Colorectal cancer
disease MESH hepatitis
disease MESH osteoporosis
disease MESH obesity
disease MESH cardiovascular disease
disease MESH emergency
disease MESH end stage renal disease
drug DRUGBANK Etoperidone
disease IDO history
drug DRUGBANK Sodium lauryl sulfate
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
disease MESH pre eclampsia
disease MESH eclampsia
pathway REACTOME Reproduction

Original Article

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