Enhancing Patient-Centered Surgical Care With Mobile Health Technology

From smartphones or wearables to portable physiologic sensors and apps, healthcare is witnessing an exponential growth in mHealth—digital health tools used to support medical and surgical care, as well as public health. In surgery, there is interest in harnessing the capabilities of mHealth to impro...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of surgical research 2022-06, Vol.274, p.178-184
Hauptverfasser: Panda, Nikhil, Perez, Numa, Tsangaris, Elena, Edelen, Maria, Pusic, Andrea, Zheng, Feibi, Haynes, Alex B.
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container_end_page 184
container_issue
container_start_page 178
container_title The Journal of surgical research
container_volume 274
creator Panda, Nikhil
Perez, Numa
Tsangaris, Elena
Edelen, Maria
Pusic, Andrea
Zheng, Feibi
Haynes, Alex B.
description From smartphones or wearables to portable physiologic sensors and apps, healthcare is witnessing an exponential growth in mHealth—digital health tools used to support medical and surgical care, as well as public health. In surgery, there is interest in harnessing the capabilities of mHealth to improve the quality of patient-centered care delivery. Digitally delivered surveys have enhanced patient-reported outcome measurement and patient engagement throughout care. Wearable devices and sensors have allowed for the assessment of physical fitness before surgery and during recovery. Smartphone-based digital phenotyping has introduced novel methods of integrating multiple data streams (accelerometer, global positioning system, call and text logs) to create multidimensional digital health footprints for patients following surgery. Yet, with all the technological sophistication and ‘big data’ mHealth provides, widespread implementation has been elusive. Do clinicians and patients find these data valuable or clinically actionable? How can mHealth become integrated into the day-to-day workflows of surgical systems? Do these data represent opportunities to address disparities of care or worsen them? In this review, we discuss experiences and future opportunities to use mHealth to enhance patient-centered surgical care.
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete
subjects Biomedical Technology
Humans
mHealth
Mobile Applications
Mobile health technology
Patient navigation
Patient-Centered Care
Patient-reported outcome measures
Smartphone
Surgical outcomes
Telemedicine - methods
Text Messaging
title Enhancing Patient-Centered Surgical Care With Mobile Health Technology
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