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Telehealth for the Longitudinal Management of Chronic Conditions: Systematic Review.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Lewinski, AA; Walsh, C; Rushton, S; Soliman, D; Carlson, SM; Luedke, MW; Halpern, DJ; Crowley, MJ; Shaw, RJ; Sharpe, JA; Alexopoulos, A-S ...
Published in: J Med Internet Res
August 26, 2022

BACKGROUND: Extensive literature support telehealth as a supplement or adjunct to in-person care for the management of chronic conditions such as congestive heart failure (CHF) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Evidence is needed to support the use of telehealth as an equivalent and equitable replacement for in-person care and to assess potential adverse effects. OBJECTIVE: We conducted a systematic review to address the following question: among adults, what is the effect of synchronous telehealth (real-time response among individuals via phone or phone and video) compared with in-person care (or compared with phone, if synchronous video care) for chronic management of CHF, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and T2DM on key disease-specific clinical outcomes and health care use? METHODS: We followed systematic review methodologies and searched two databases (MEDLINE and Embase). We included randomized or quasi-experimental studies that evaluated the effect of synchronously delivered telehealth for relevant chronic conditions that occurred over ≥2 encounters and in which some or all in-person care was supplanted by care delivered via phone or video. We assessed the bias using the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organization of Care risk of bias (ROB) tool and the certainty of evidence using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation. We described the findings narratively and did not conduct meta-analysis owing to the small number of studies and the conceptual heterogeneity of the identified interventions. RESULTS: We identified 8662 studies, and 129 (1.49%) were reviewed at the full-text stage. In total, 3.9% (5/129) of the articles were retained for data extraction, all of which (5/5, 100%) were randomized controlled trials. The CHF study (1/5, 20%) was found to have high ROB and randomized patients (n=210) to receive quarterly automated asynchronous web-based review and follow-up of telemetry data versus synchronous personal follow-up (in-person vs phone-based) for 1 year. A 3-way comparison across study arms found no significant differences in clinical outcomes. Overall, 80% (4/5) of the studies (n=466) evaluated synchronous care for patients with T2DM (ROB was judged to be low for 2, 50% of studies and high for 2, 50% of studies). In total, 20% (1/5) of the studies were adequately powered to assess the difference in glycosylated hemoglobin level between groups; however, no significant difference was found. Intervention design varied greatly from remote monitoring of blood glucose combined with video versus in-person visits to an endocrinology clinic to a brief, 3-week remote intervention to stabilize uncontrolled diabetes. No articles were identified for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. CONCLUSIONS: This review found few studies with a variety of designs and interventions that used telehealth as a replacement for in-person care. Future research should consider including observational studies and studies on additional highly prevalent chronic diseases.

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Published In

J Med Internet Res

DOI

EISSN

1438-8871

Publication Date

August 26, 2022

Volume

24

Issue

8

Start / End Page

e37100

Location

Canada

Related Subject Headings

  • Text Messaging
  • Telemedicine
  • Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive
  • Medical Informatics
  • Humans
  • Heart Failure
  • Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2
  • Chronic Disease
  • Adult
  • 4203 Health services and systems
 

Citation

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Chicago
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Lewinski, A. A., Walsh, C., Rushton, S., Soliman, D., Carlson, S. M., Luedke, M. W., … Goldstein, K. M. (2022). Telehealth for the Longitudinal Management of Chronic Conditions: Systematic Review. J Med Internet Res, 24(8), e37100. https://doi.org/10.2196/37100
Lewinski, Allison A., Conor Walsh, Sharron Rushton, Diana Soliman, Scott M. Carlson, Matthew W. Luedke, David J. Halpern, et al. “Telehealth for the Longitudinal Management of Chronic Conditions: Systematic Review.J Med Internet Res 24, no. 8 (August 26, 2022): e37100. https://doi.org/10.2196/37100.
Lewinski AA, Walsh C, Rushton S, Soliman D, Carlson SM, Luedke MW, et al. Telehealth for the Longitudinal Management of Chronic Conditions: Systematic Review. J Med Internet Res. 2022 Aug 26;24(8):e37100.
Lewinski, Allison A., et al. “Telehealth for the Longitudinal Management of Chronic Conditions: Systematic Review.J Med Internet Res, vol. 24, no. 8, Aug. 2022, p. e37100. Pubmed, doi:10.2196/37100.
Lewinski AA, Walsh C, Rushton S, Soliman D, Carlson SM, Luedke MW, Halpern DJ, Crowley MJ, Shaw RJ, Sharpe JA, Alexopoulos A-S, Tabriz AA, Dietch JR, Uthappa DM, Hwang S, Ball Ricks KA, Cantrell S, Kosinski AS, Ear B, Gordon AM, Gierisch JM, Williams JW, Goldstein KM. Telehealth for the Longitudinal Management of Chronic Conditions: Systematic Review. J Med Internet Res. 2022 Aug 26;24(8):e37100.

Published In

J Med Internet Res

DOI

EISSN

1438-8871

Publication Date

August 26, 2022

Volume

24

Issue

8

Start / End Page

e37100

Location

Canada

Related Subject Headings

  • Text Messaging
  • Telemedicine
  • Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive
  • Medical Informatics
  • Humans
  • Heart Failure
  • Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2
  • Chronic Disease
  • Adult
  • 4203 Health services and systems