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A Review of Randomized Controlled Trials Utilizing Telemedicine for Improving Heart Failure Readmission: Can a Realist Approach Bridge the Translational Divide? Publisher



Gonzalez Garcia M1, 2 ; Fatehi F1, 3, 4 ; Bashi N1, 5 ; Varnfield M1 ; Iyngkaran P6 ; Driscoll A7 ; Neil C8 ; Hare DL9 ; Oldenburg B10
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Australian eHealth Research Centre, CSIRO, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
  2. 2. Heart Centre, University Hospital of Umea, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Umea University, Umea, Sweden
  3. 3. Centre for Online Health, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
  4. 4. Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  5. 5. Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
  6. 6. NT Medical School, Flinders University, Darwin, NT, Australia
  7. 7. School of Nursing and Midwifery, Deakin University and Austin Health, Geelong, VIC, Australia
  8. 8. Department of Medicine – Western Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
  9. 9. The University of Melbourne, Austin Health, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
  10. 10. WHO Collaborating Centre on Implementation Research for Prevention & Control of NCDs, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, VIC, Australia

Source: Clinical Medicine Insights: Cardiology Published:2019


Abstract

Background: Telemedicine and digital health technologies hold great promise for improving clinical care of heart failure. However, inconsistent and contradictory findings from randomized controlled trials have so far discouraged widespread adoption of digital health in routine clinical practice. We undertook this review study to summarize the study outcomes of the use of exploring the evidence for telemedicine in the clinical care of patients with heart failure and readmissions. Methods: We inspected the references of guidelines and searched PubMed for randomized controlled trials published over the past 10 years on the use of telemedicine for reducing readmission in heart failure. We utilized a modified realist review approach to identify the underlying contextual mechanisms for the intervention(s) in each randomized controlled trial, evaluating outcomes of the intervention and understanding how and under what conditions they worked. To provide uniformity, all extracted data were synthesized using adapted domains from the taxonomy for disease management created by the Disease Management Taxonomy Writing Group. Results: A total of 12 papers were eligible, 6 of them supporting and 6 others undermining the use of telemedicine for improving heart failure readmission. In general terms, those studies not supporting the use of telemedicine were multicentre, publicly funded, with large amount of participants, and long duration. The patients had also better rates of treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors/angiotensin II receptor blocker and beta-blockers, and telemonitoring and automatic transmission of vital signs were less utilized, in comparison with the studies in which telemedicine use was supported. The analysis of the environment, intensity, content of interventions, method of communication, quality of the underlying model of care and the ability, capability, and interest from health workers can help us to envisage probabilities of success of telemedicine use. Conclusions: A realist lens may aid to understand whom and in which circumstances the use of telemedicine can add any substantial value to traditional models of care. Wider outcome criteria beyond major adverse cardiovascular events, for example, cost efficacy, should also be considered as appropriate for effecting guidelines on care delivery when robust prognostic therapeutics already exist. © The Author(s) 2019.