Digital technologies in cancer care: a review from the clinician's perspective.
Logan G BriggsMuhieddine L LabbanKhalid Y AlkhatibDavid-Dan NguyenAlexander P ColeQuoc Dien TrinhPublished in: Journal of comparative effectiveness research (2022)
Physicians are increasingly utilizing digital health technologies (DHT) such as smartphone applications, network-enabled wearable devices, web-based communication platforms, videoconferencing, chatbots, artificial intelligence and virtual reality to improve access to, and quality of, care. DHT aid in cancer screening, patient education, shared decision-making, promotion of positive health habits, symptom monitoring and intervention, patient-provider communication, provision of psychological support and delivery of effective survivorship care. This narrative review outlines how physicians may utilize digital health to improve or augment their delivery of cancer care. For the full potential of DHT to be realized, experts must develop appropriate solutions to issues surrounding the regulation, liability, quality, security, equity and reimbursement of DHT.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- artificial intelligence
- quality improvement
- public health
- primary care
- palliative care
- mental health
- virtual reality
- machine learning
- case report
- health information
- randomized controlled trial
- human health
- health promotion
- risk assessment
- global health
- young adults
- physical activity
- climate change
- depressive symptoms
- health insurance
- network analysis