Understanding factors affecting patient and public engagement and recruitment to digital health interventions: a systematic review of qualitative studies
University of Manchester · University of Glasgow · +1 more institution
Abstract
Numerous types of digital health interventions (DHIs) are available to patients and the public but many factors affect their ability to engage and enrol in them. This systematic review aims to identify and synthesise the qualitative literature on barriers and facilitators to engagement and recruitment to DHIs to inform future implementation efforts.
PubMed, MEDLINE, CINAHL, Embase, Scopus and the ACM Digital Library were searched for English language qualitative studies from 2000 - 2015 that discussed factors affecting engagement and enrolment in a range of DHIs (e.g. 'telemedicine', 'mobile applications', 'personal health record', 'social networking'). Text mining and additional search strategies were used to identify 1,448 records. Two reviewers independently carried out paper screening, quality assessment, data extraction and analysis. Data was analysed using framework synthesis, informed by Normalization Process Theory, and Burden of Treatment Theory helped conceptualise the interpretation of results.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 32.99
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 100
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Health informatics
- Public health
- Psychological intervention
- Digital health
- Qualitative research
- Medicine
- Nursing research
- Systematic review
- Quality Education