4.6 Article

How Useful Are Digital Health Terms for Outcomes Research? An ISPOR Special Interest Group Report

Journal

VALUE IN HEALTH
Volume 25, Issue 9, Pages 1469-1479

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jval.2022.04.1730

Keywords

definition; digital health; electronic health; mobile health; outcomes research; systematic review; telehealth; telemedicine

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This study reviewed definitions of digital health and examined their relevance to health outcomes research. The results showed that while there are existing seminal definitions, they have been adapted over time and new definitions have emerged. However, there is still considerable overlap between the four umbrella terms in terms of their characteristics.
Objectives: This study aimed to review definitions of digital health and understand their relevance for health outcomes research. Four umbrella terms (digital health, electronic health, mobile health, and telehealth/telemedicine) were summarized in this article.Methods: PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Library, and EconLit were searched from January 2015 to May 2020 for systematic reviews containing key Medical Subject Headings terms for digital health (n = 38) and synonyms of definition. Independent pairs of reviewers performed each stage of the review, with reconciliation by a third reviewer if required. A single reviewer consolidated each definition for consistency. We performed text analysis via word clouds and computed document frequency-and inverse corpus frequency scores.Results: The search retrieved 2610 records with 545 articles (20.9%) taken forward for full-text review. Of these, 39.3% (214 of 545) were eligible for data extraction, of which 134 full-text articles were retained for this analysis containing 142 unique definitions of umbrella terms (digital health [n = 4], electronic health [n = 36], mobile health [n = 50], and telehealth/ telemedicine [n = 52]). Seminal definitions exist but have increasingly been adapted over time and new definitions were created. Nevertheless, the most characteristic words extracted from the definitions via the text analyses still showed considerable overlap between the 4 umbrella terms.Conclusions: To focus evidence summaries for outcomes research purposes, umbrella terms should be accompanied by Medical Subject Headings terms reflecting population, intervention, comparator, outcome, timing, and setting. Ultimately a functional classification system is needed to create standardized terminology for digital health interventions denoting the domains of patient-level effects and outcomes.

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