Litcius/Paper detail

Digital Health Interventions by Clinical Pharmacists: A Systematic Review

Taehwan Park, J. Muzumdar, Hye Min Kim

2022International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Integrating digital interventions in healthcare has gained increasing popularity among clinical pharmacists (CPs) due to advances in technology. The purpose of this study was to systematically review CP-led digital interventions to improve patients’ health-related clinical outcomes. PubMed and the Cochrane Database were searched to select studies that had conducted a randomized controlled trial to evaluate clinical outcomes in adults following a CP-led digital intervention for the period from January 2005 to August 2021. A total of 19 studies were included in our analysis. In these 19 studies, the most commonly used digital intervention by CPs was telephone use (n = 15), followed by a web-based tool (n = 2) and a mobile app (n = 2). These interventions were provided to serve a wide range of purposes in patients’ outcomes: change in lab values (e.g., blood pressure, HbA1c) (n = 23), reduction in health service use (n = 8), enhancing adherence (n = 6), improvement in drug-related outcomes (n = 6), increase in survival (n = 3), and reduction in health-related risk (e.g., CVD risk) (n = 2). Although the impacts of telephone-based interventions on patients’ outcomes were decidedly mixed, web-based interventions and mobile apps exerted generally positive influences. To date, little research has investigated the cost-effectiveness of digital interventions. Future studies are warranted.

Topics & Concepts

Psychological interventionMedicineDigital healthRandomized controlled trialmHealthHealth careClinical trialMEDLINESystematic reviewFamily medicineNursingInternal medicineEconomic growthLawEconomicsPolitical scienceMedication Adherence and CompliancePharmaceutical Practices and Patient OutcomesMobile Health and mHealth Applications