Iribarren Sarah J, Cato Kenrick, Falzon Louise, Stone Patricia W
University of Washington, Department of Biobehavioral Nursing and Health Informatics, School of Nursing, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
Columbia University, School of Nursing, New York, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Feb 2;12(2):e0170581. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0170581. eCollection 2017.
Mobile health (mHealth) is often reputed to be cost-effective or cost-saving. Despite optimism, the strength of the evidence supporting this assertion has been limited. In this systematic review the body of evidence related to economic evaluations of mHealth interventions is assessed and summarized.
Seven electronic bibliographic databases, grey literature, and relevant references were searched. Eligibility criteria included original articles, comparison of costs and consequences of interventions (one categorized as a primary mHealth intervention or mHealth intervention as a component of other interventions), health and economic outcomes and published in English. Full economic evaluations were appraised using the Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards (CHEERS) checklist and The PRISMA guidelines were followed.
Searches identified 5902 results, of which 318 were examined at full text, and 39 were included in this review. The 39 studies spanned 19 countries, most of which were conducted in upper and upper-middle income countries (34, 87.2%). Primary mHealth interventions (35, 89.7%), behavior change communication type interventions (e.g., improve attendance rates, medication adherence) (27, 69.2%), and short messaging system (SMS) as the mHealth function (e.g., used to send reminders, information, provide support, conduct surveys or collect data) (22, 56.4%) were most frequent; the most frequent disease or condition focuses were outpatient clinic attendance, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes. The average percent of CHEERS checklist items reported was 79.6% (range 47.62-100, STD 14.18) and the top quartile reported 91.3-100%. In 29 studies (74.3%), researchers reported that the mHealth intervention was cost-effective, economically beneficial, or cost saving at base case.
Findings highlight a growing body of economic evidence for mHealth interventions. Although all studies included a comparison of intervention effectiveness of a health-related outcome and reported economic data, many did not report all recommended economic outcome items and were lacking in comprehensive analysis. The identified economic evaluations varied by disease or condition focus, economic outcome measurements, perspectives, and were distributed unevenly geographically, limiting formal meta-analysis. Further research is needed in low and low-middle income countries and to understand the impact of different mHealth types. Following established economic reporting guidelines will improve this body of research.
移动健康(mHealth)通常被认为具有成本效益或能节省成本。尽管人们对此持乐观态度,但支持这一论断的证据力度一直有限。在本系统综述中,对与mHealth干预经济评估相关的证据进行了评估和总结。
检索了七个电子文献数据库、灰色文献及相关参考文献。纳入标准包括原创文章、干预措施成本与结果的比较(其中一项归类为主要mHealth干预或作为其他干预措施组成部分的mHealth干预)、健康和经济结果且以英文发表。使用《卫生经济评估报告标准合并清单》(CHEERS)对全面的经济评估进行评价,并遵循《系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目》(PRISMA)指南。
检索共得到5902条结果,其中318条进行了全文审查,39条纳入本综述。这39项研究覆盖19个国家,其中大部分在高收入和中高收入国家开展(34项,占87.2%)。主要mHealth干预(35项,占89.7%)、行为改变沟通类干预(如提高出勤率、药物依从性)(27项,占69.2%)以及将短消息服务(SMS)作为mHealth功能(如用于发送提醒、信息、提供支持、开展调查或收集数据)(22项,占56.4%)最为常见;最常见的疾病或健康状况关注点为门诊就诊、心血管疾病和糖尿病。CHEERS清单项目的平均报告百分比为79.6%(范围47.62 - 100,标准差14.18),前四分位数报告为91.3 - 100%。在29项研究(74.3%)中,研究人员报告称mHealth干预在基础案例下具有成本效益、经济效益或节省成本。
研究结果凸显了mHealth干预经济证据的不断增加。尽管所有研究都包括了与健康相关结果的干预效果比较并报告了经济数据,但许多研究并未报告所有推荐的经济结果项目,且缺乏全面分析。已确定的经济评估在疾病或健康状况关注点、经济结果测量、视角方面存在差异,且地理分布不均衡,限制了正式的Meta分析。低收入和低中收入国家以及了解不同mHealth类型的影响方面还需要进一步研究。遵循既定的经济报告指南将改善这一研究领域。