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The influence of telehealth-based cancer rehabilitation interventions on disability: a systematic review

Authors :
Rachelle Brick
Lynne Padgett
Jennifer Jones
Kelley Covington Wood
Mackenzi Pergolotti
Timothy F. Marshall
Grace Campbell
Rachel Eilers
Sareh Keshavarzi
Ann Marie Flores
Julie K. Silver
Aneesha Virani
Alicia A. Livinski
Mohammed Faizan Ahmed
Tiffany Kendig
Bismah Khalid
Jeremy Barnett
Anita Borhani
Graysen Bernard
Kathleen Doyle Lyons
Source :
Journal of cancer survivorship : research and practice.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

To characterize delivery features and explore effectiveness of telehealth-based cancer rehabilitation interventions that address disability in adult cancer survivors.A systematic review of electronic databases (CINAHL Plus, Cochrane Library: Database of Systematic Reviews, Embase, National Health Service's Health Technology Assessment, PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science) was conducted in December 2019 and updated in April 2021.Searches identified 3,499 unique studies. Sixty-eight studies met inclusion criteria. There were 81 unique interventions across included studies. Interventions were primarily delivered post-treatment and lasted an average of 16.5 weeks (SD = 13.1). They were most frequently delivered using telephone calls (59%), administered delivered by nursing professionals (35%), and delivered in a one-on-one format (88%). Risk of bias of included studies was primarily moderate to high. Included studies captured 55 measures of disability. Only 54% of reported outcomes had data that allowed calculation of effect sizes ranging -3.58 to 15.66.The analyses suggest small effects of telehealth-based cancer interventions on disability, though the heterogeneity seen in the measurement of disability makes it hard to draw firm conclusions. Further research using more diverse samples, common measures of disability, and pragmatic study designs is needed to advance telehealth in cancer rehabilitation.Telehealth-based cancer rehabilitation interventions have the potential to increase access to care designed to reduce disability across the cancer care continuum.

Subjects

Subjects :
Oncology
Oncology (nursing)

Details

ISSN :
19322267
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of cancer survivorship : research and practice
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....635ac79dd96002ea5af583e9ee852901