Journal Article10.1016/s0959-8049(22)01499-x
Developing an effective self-management web-based intervention using co-designed patient and multidisciplinary research: ePainQ
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TL;DR: The James Lind Alliance breast surgery priority setting partnership (2022) identified the need to support patients around the time of diagnosis, during and after treatment, asking what are the best methods to individualise information and support given to patients as mentioned in this paper .
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Abstract: Background: Breast cancer is the most common cancer in terms of newly diagnosed cases. Surgery is the mainstay of treatment but confers comorbidities including high rates of persistent post-surgical pain. The James Lind Alliance breast surgery priority setting partnership (2022) identified the need to support patients around the time of diagnosis, during and after treatment, asking what are the best methods to individualise information and support given to patients. Web-based interventions providing real-time symptom reporting support patients and clinicians to make early and effective decisions regarding care.
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Co-Designing Remote Patient Monitoring Technologies for Inpatients: Systematic Review (Preprint)
Jennifer Sumner,Si Ying Tan,Yuchen Wang,C Keck,Eunice Wei Xin Lee,Emily Hwee Hoon Chew,Alexander Wenjun Yip +6 more
- 07 Mar 2024
TL;DR: This systematic review of 17 co-designed remote patient monitoring technologies for inpatients identifies common approaches, challenges, and enablers, but finds limited evidence of clinical effectiveness, highlighting the need for stronger clinical evaluation and standardized co-design terminology.
Co-Designing Remote Patient Monitoring Technologies for Inpatients: Systematic Review
Jennifer Sumner,Si Ying Tan,Yuchen Wang,C Keck,Eunice Wei Xin Lee,Emily Hwee Hoon Chew,Alexander Wenjun Yip +6 more
TL;DR: This systematic review of 17 co-designed remote patient monitoring technologies for inpatients found that co-design enhances relevance, usability, and adoption, but clinical effectiveness remains uncertain due to lack of evaluation, highlighting the need for stronger clinical evaluation and standardized co-design terminology.