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The contribution of teleconsultation and videoconferencing to diabetes care: a systematic literature review

Abstract

Background:
A systematic literature review was carried out to study the benefits of teleconsultation and videoconferencing on the multifaceted process of diabetes care. Previous reviews focused primarily on usability of technology and considered mainly one-sided interventions.

Objective:
The objective was to determine the benefits and deficiencies of teleconsultation and videoconferencing regarding clinical, behavioral, and care coordination outcomes of diabetes care.

Methods:
Electronic databases (Medline, PiCarta, PsycINFO, ScienceDirect, Telemedicine Information Exchange, ISI Web of Science, Google Scholar) were searched for relevant publications. The contribution to diabetes care was examined for clinical outcomes (eg, HbA1c, blood pressure, quality of life), behavioral outcomes (patient-caregiver interaction, self-care), and care coordination outcomes (usability of technology, cost-effectiveness, transparency of guidelines, equity of care access). Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) with HbA1c as an outcome were pooled using standard meta-analytical methods.

Results:
Of 852 publications identified, 39 met the inclusion criteria for electronic communication between (groups of) caregivers and patients with type 1, type 2, or gestational diabetes. Studies that evaluated teleconsultation or videoconferencing not particularly aimed at diabetes were excluded, as were those that described interventions aimed solely at clinical improvements (eg, HbA1c). There were 22 interventions related to teleconsultation, 13 to videoconferencing, and 4 to combined teleconsultation and videoconferencing. The heterogeneous nature of the identified videoconferencing studies did not permit a formal meta-analysis. Pooled results from the six RCTs of the identified teleconsultation studies did not show a significant reduction in HbA1c (0.03%, 95% CI = – 0.31% to 0.24%) compared to usual care. There was no significant statistical heterogeneity among the pooled RCTs (χ27= 7.99, P = .33). It can be concluded that in the period under review (1994-2006) 39 studies had a scope broader than clinical outcomes and involved interventions allowing patient-caregiver interaction. Most of the reported improvements concerned satisfaction with technology (26/39 studies), improved metabolic control (21/39), and cost reductions (16/39). Improvements in quality of life (6/39 studies), transparency (5/39), and better access to care (4/39) were hardly observed. Teleconsultation programs involving daily monitoring of clinical data, education, and personal feedback proved to be most successful in realizing behavioral change and reducing costs. The benefits of videoconferencing were mainly related to its effects on socioeconomic factors such as education and cost reduction, but also on monitoring disease. Additionally, videoconferencing seemed to maintain quality of care while producing cost savings.

Conclusions:
The selected studies suggest that both teleconsultation and videoconferencing are practical, cost-effective, and reliable ways of delivering a worthwhile health care service to diabetics. However, the diversity in study design and reported findings makes a strong conclusion premature. To further the contribution of technology to diabetes care, interactive systems should be developed that integrate monitoring and personalized feedback functions.

Verhoeven F, van Gemert-Pijnen L, Dijkstra K, Nijland N, Seydel ER, Steehouder MF. The contribution of teleconsultation and videoconferencing to diabetes care: a systematic literature review. J. Med. Internet Res. 2007;9(5):e37.

27 December 2007

Bibliographic Data

Title:

The contribution of teleconsultation and videoconferencing to diabetes care: a systematic literature review

Author(s):

Verhoeven, Fenne; van Gemert-Pijnen, Lisette; Dijkstra, Karin; Nijland, Nicol; Seydel, Erwin R.; Steehouder, Michaël F.

Journal

J Med Internet Res, 9(5), pp. e37
(2007-12-14)

URL:

Full article

DOI:

10.2196/jmir.9.5.e37

PMID:

18093904

Keyword(s):

Cost-Benefit Analysis, Delivery of Health Care, Diabetes Mellitus, Literature Review, Teleconsultation, Videoconferencing

Citation:
Verhoeven F, van Gemert-Pijnen L, Dijkstra K, Nijland N, Seydel ER, Steehouder MF. The contribution of teleconsultation and videoconferencing to diabetes care: a systematic literature review. J. Med. Internet Res. 2007;9(5):e37.

Other Publications

In ICMCC Database

All J Med Internet Res articles (141).

Other article(s) by

Fenne Verhoeven (1).

Erwin R. Seydel (5).

Nicol Nijland (4).

Lisette van Gemert-Pijnen (1).

Michaël F. Steehouder (2).

Discussion




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University of Twente - Faculty of Behavioral Sciences - Department of Technical and Professional Communication, Netherlands

University of Twente - Faculty of Behavioral Sciences - Department of Psychology and Communication of Health, Netherlands

University of Twente - Faculty of Behavioral Sciences - Department of Marketing Communication and Consumer Psychology, Netherlands

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PubMed

Fenne Verhoeven
Erwin R. Seydel
Nicol Nijland
Karin Dijkstra
Lisette van Gemert-Pijnen
Michaël F. Steehouder

Google Scholar

Fenne Verhoeven
Erwin R. Seydel
Nicol Nijland
Karin Dijkstra
Lisette van Gemert-Pijnen
Michaël F. Steehouder

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