Digital Technologies to Support Better Outcome and Experience of Care in Patients with Heart Failure.
K C C McBeathC E AngermannMartin R CowiePublished in: Current heart failure reports (2022)
Digital technologies are increasingly used by healthcare professionals and those living with heart failure to support more personalised and timely shared decision-making, earlier identification of problems, and an improved experience of care. The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the acceptability and implementation of a range of digital technologies, including remote monitoring and health tracking, mobile health (wearable technology and smartphone-based applications), and the use of machine learning to augment data interpretation and decision-making. Much has been learned over recent decades on the challenges and opportunities of technology development, including how best to evaluate the impact of digital health interventions on health and healthcare, the human factors involved in implementation and how best to integrate dataflows into the clinical pathway. Supporting patients with heart failure as well as healthcare professionals (both with a broad range of health and digital literacy skills) is crucial to success. Access to digital technologies and the internet remains a challenge for some patients. The aim should be to identify the right technology for the right patient at the right time, in a process of co-design and co-implementation with patients.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- health information
- end stage renal disease
- public health
- heart failure
- mental health
- machine learning
- quality improvement
- primary care
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- decision making
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- physical activity
- patient reported outcomes
- risk assessment
- electronic health record
- pain management
- atrial fibrillation
- climate change
- health insurance
- patient reported
- human health
- chronic pain