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eHealth as the Next-Generation Perinatal Care: An Overview of the Literature

BACKGROUND: Unrestricted by time and place, electronic health (eHealth) provides solutions for patient empowerment and value-based health care. Women in the reproductive age are particularly frequent users of internet, social media, and smartphone apps. Therefore, the pregnant patient seems to be a...

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Autores principales: van den Heuvel, Josephus FM, Groenhof, T Katrien, Veerbeek, Jan HW, van Solinge, Wouter W, Lely, A Titia, Franx, Arie, Bekker, Mireille N
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6008510/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29871855
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.9262
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author van den Heuvel, Josephus FM
Groenhof, T Katrien
Veerbeek, Jan HW
van Solinge, Wouter W
Lely, A Titia
Franx, Arie
Bekker, Mireille N
author_facet van den Heuvel, Josephus FM
Groenhof, T Katrien
Veerbeek, Jan HW
van Solinge, Wouter W
Lely, A Titia
Franx, Arie
Bekker, Mireille N
author_sort van den Heuvel, Josephus FM
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Unrestricted by time and place, electronic health (eHealth) provides solutions for patient empowerment and value-based health care. Women in the reproductive age are particularly frequent users of internet, social media, and smartphone apps. Therefore, the pregnant patient seems to be a prime candidate for eHealth-supported health care with telemedicine for fetal and maternal conditions. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to review the current literature on eHealth developments in pregnancy to assess this new generation of perinatal care. METHODS: We conducted a systematic literature search of studies on eHealth technology in perinatal care in PubMed and EMBASE in June 2017. Studies reporting the use of eHealth during prenatal, perinatal, and postnatal care were included. Given the heterogeneity in study methods, used technologies, and outcome measurements, results were analyzed and presented in a narrative overview of the literature. RESULTS: The literature search provided 71 studies of interest. These studies were categorized in 6 domains: information and eHealth use, lifestyle (gestational weight gain, exercise, and smoking cessation), gestational diabetes, mental health, low- and middle-income countries, and telemonitoring and teleconsulting. Most studies in gestational diabetes and mental health show that eHealth applications are good alternatives to standard practice. Examples are interactive blood glucose management with remote care using smartphones, telephone screening for postnatal depression, and Web-based cognitive behavioral therapy. Apps and exercise programs show a direction toward less gestational weight gain, increase in step count, and increase in smoking abstinence. Multiple studies describe novel systems to enable home fetal monitoring with cardiotocography and uterine activity. However, only few studies assess outcomes in terms of fetal monitoring safety and efficacy in high-risk pregnancy. Patients and clinicians report good overall satisfaction with new strategies that enable the shift from hospital-centered to patient-centered care. CONCLUSIONS: This review showed that eHealth interventions have a very broad, multilevel field of application focused on perinatal care in all its aspects. Most of the reviewed 71 articles were published after 2013, suggesting this novel type of care is an important topic of clinical and scientific relevance. Despite the promising preliminary results as presented, we accentuate the need for evidence for health outcomes, patient satisfaction, and the impact on costs of the possibilities of eHealth interventions in perinatal care. In general, the combination of increased patient empowerment and home pregnancy care could lead to more satisfaction and efficiency. Despite the challenges of privacy, liability, and costs, eHealth is very likely to disperse globally in the next decade, and it has the potential to deliver a revolution in perinatal care.
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spelling pubmed-60085102018-06-27 eHealth as the Next-Generation Perinatal Care: An Overview of the Literature van den Heuvel, Josephus FM Groenhof, T Katrien Veerbeek, Jan HW van Solinge, Wouter W Lely, A Titia Franx, Arie Bekker, Mireille N J Med Internet Res Review BACKGROUND: Unrestricted by time and place, electronic health (eHealth) provides solutions for patient empowerment and value-based health care. Women in the reproductive age are particularly frequent users of internet, social media, and smartphone apps. Therefore, the pregnant patient seems to be a prime candidate for eHealth-supported health care with telemedicine for fetal and maternal conditions. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to review the current literature on eHealth developments in pregnancy to assess this new generation of perinatal care. METHODS: We conducted a systematic literature search of studies on eHealth technology in perinatal care in PubMed and EMBASE in June 2017. Studies reporting the use of eHealth during prenatal, perinatal, and postnatal care were included. Given the heterogeneity in study methods, used technologies, and outcome measurements, results were analyzed and presented in a narrative overview of the literature. RESULTS: The literature search provided 71 studies of interest. These studies were categorized in 6 domains: information and eHealth use, lifestyle (gestational weight gain, exercise, and smoking cessation), gestational diabetes, mental health, low- and middle-income countries, and telemonitoring and teleconsulting. Most studies in gestational diabetes and mental health show that eHealth applications are good alternatives to standard practice. Examples are interactive blood glucose management with remote care using smartphones, telephone screening for postnatal depression, and Web-based cognitive behavioral therapy. Apps and exercise programs show a direction toward less gestational weight gain, increase in step count, and increase in smoking abstinence. Multiple studies describe novel systems to enable home fetal monitoring with cardiotocography and uterine activity. However, only few studies assess outcomes in terms of fetal monitoring safety and efficacy in high-risk pregnancy. Patients and clinicians report good overall satisfaction with new strategies that enable the shift from hospital-centered to patient-centered care. CONCLUSIONS: This review showed that eHealth interventions have a very broad, multilevel field of application focused on perinatal care in all its aspects. Most of the reviewed 71 articles were published after 2013, suggesting this novel type of care is an important topic of clinical and scientific relevance. Despite the promising preliminary results as presented, we accentuate the need for evidence for health outcomes, patient satisfaction, and the impact on costs of the possibilities of eHealth interventions in perinatal care. In general, the combination of increased patient empowerment and home pregnancy care could lead to more satisfaction and efficiency. Despite the challenges of privacy, liability, and costs, eHealth is very likely to disperse globally in the next decade, and it has the potential to deliver a revolution in perinatal care. JMIR Publications 2018-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6008510/ /pubmed/29871855 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.9262 Text en ©Josephus FM van den Heuvel, T Katrien Groenhof, Jan HW Veerbeek, Wouter W van Solinge, A Titia Lely, Arie Franx, Mireille N Bekker. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 05.06.2018. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Review
van den Heuvel, Josephus FM
Groenhof, T Katrien
Veerbeek, Jan HW
van Solinge, Wouter W
Lely, A Titia
Franx, Arie
Bekker, Mireille N
eHealth as the Next-Generation Perinatal Care: An Overview of the Literature
title eHealth as the Next-Generation Perinatal Care: An Overview of the Literature
title_full eHealth as the Next-Generation Perinatal Care: An Overview of the Literature
title_fullStr eHealth as the Next-Generation Perinatal Care: An Overview of the Literature
title_full_unstemmed eHealth as the Next-Generation Perinatal Care: An Overview of the Literature
title_short eHealth as the Next-Generation Perinatal Care: An Overview of the Literature
title_sort ehealth as the next-generation perinatal care: an overview of the literature
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6008510/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29871855
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.9262
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