健康
医学
心理干预
医疗保健
远程医疗
互联网隐私
付款
可穿戴计算机
医疗急救
风险分析(工程)
护理部
计算机科学
万维网
经济增长
嵌入式系统
经济
作者
Hubert B. Haywood,Andrew J. Sauer,Larry A. Allen,Nancy M. Albert,Adam D. DeVore
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cardfail.2023.07.005
摘要
Mobile health (mHealth) is an emerging approach to health care. It involves wearable, connected technologies that facilitate patient-symptom or physiological monitoring, support clinical feedback to patients and physicians, and promote patients' education and self-care. Evolving algorithms may involve artificial intelligence and can assist in data aggregation and health care teams' interpretations. Ultimately, the goal is not merely to collect data; rather, it is to increase actionability. mHealth technology holds particular promise for patients with heart failure, especially those with frequently changing clinical status. mHealth, ideally, can identify care opportunities, anticipate clinical courses and augment providers' capacity to implement, titrate and monitor interventions safely, including evidence-based therapies. Although there have been marked advancements in the past decade, uncertainties remain for mHealth, including questions regarding optimal indications and acceptable payment models. In regard to mHealth capability, a better understanding is needed of the incremental benefit of mHealth data over usual care, the accuracy of specific mHealth data points in making clinical care decisions, and the efficiency and precision of algorithms used to dictate actions. Importantly, emerging regulations in the wake of COVID-19, and now the end of the federal public health emergency, offer both opportunity and risks to the broader adoption of mHealth-enabled services. In this review, we explore the current state of mHealth in heart failure, with particular attention to the opportunities and challenges this technology creates for patients, health care providers and other stakeholders.
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