Mobile devices and wearable technology for measuring patient outcomes after surgery: a systematic review.
Stephen R KnightNathan NgAthanasios TsanasKenneth McleanClaudia PagliariEwen M HarrisonPublished in: NPJ digital medicine (2021)
Complications following surgery are common and frequently occur the following discharge. Mobile and wearable digital health interventions (DHI) provide an opportunity to monitor and support patients during their postoperative recovery. Lack of high-quality evidence is often cited as a barrier to DHI implementation. This review captures and appraises the current use, evidence base and reporting quality of mobile and wearable DHI following surgery. Keyword searches were performed within Embase, Cochrane Library, Web of Science and WHO Global Index Medicus databases, together with clinical trial registries and Google scholar. Studies involving patients undergoing any surgery requiring skin incision where postoperative outcomes were measured using a DHI following hospital discharge were included, with DHI defined as mobile and wireless technologies for health to improve health system efficiency and health outcomes. Methodological reporting quality was determined using the validated mobile health evidence reporting and assessment (mERA) guidelines. Bias was assessed using the Cochrane Collaboration tool for randomised studies or MINORS depending on study type. Overall, 6969 articles were screened, with 44 articles included. The majority (n = 34) described small prospective study designs, with a high risk of bias demonstrated. Reporting standards were suboptimal across all domains, particularly in relation to data security, prior patient engagement and cost analysis. Despite the potential of DHI to improve postoperative patient care, current progress is severely restricted by limitations in methodological reporting. There is an urgent need to improve reporting for DHI following surgery to identify patient benefit, promote reproducibility and encourage sustainability.
Keyphrases
- patients undergoing
- minimally invasive
- adverse drug
- coronary artery bypass
- clinical trial
- public health
- healthcare
- surgical site infection
- heart rate
- mental health
- quality improvement
- newly diagnosed
- risk factors
- study protocol
- primary care
- social media
- randomized controlled trial
- emergency department
- prognostic factors
- electronic health record
- double blind
- type diabetes
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- case control
- climate change
- soft tissue
- cataract surgery
- wound healing
- placebo controlled