Understanding the barriers and facilitators of Digital Health Technology (DHT) implementation in neurological rehabilitation: An integrative systematic review

Jarvis, Kathryn orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-5963-7346, Thetford, Clare orcid iconORCID: 0000-0003-2188-3052, Turck, Edward, Ogley, Kelly and Stockley, Rachel orcid iconORCID: 0000-0003-4441-6860 (2024) Understanding the barriers and facilitators of Digital Health Technology (DHT) implementation in neurological rehabilitation: An integrative systematic review. Health Services Insights .

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1177/11786329241229917

Abstract

Background
Digital Health technologies (DHT) have potential to deliver intensive, novel and engaging rehabilitation for people with neurological conditions, yet health services lack a strong track record in embedding DHT into practice. The aim of this review was to synthesise factors that have been shown to influence implementation of DHT into neurological rehabilitation.
Method
An integrative review was undertaken. An extensive search of MEDLINE, CINAHL, AMED, EMBASE was undertaken. The title and abstract of all retrieved sources were screened against pre-defined criteria. Retained sources underwent full text review. The quality of all included sources was assessed. A meta-ethnographic synthesis explored commonalities and contradictions of the included studies.
Results
Fourteen studies (one quantitative, eight qualitative and five mixed methods) were included. Eleven implementation theories/models/frameworks were used across the 14 studies. Five themes were identified: (i) individual factors; (ii) user experience of the technology; (iii) the content of the intervention; (iv) access to the technology and (v) supporting use.
Conclusions
Key factors which appear to influence the implementation of DHT into clinical settings are highlighted. Implementation theories, models and frameworks are under-utilised in DHT rehabilitation research. This needs to be addressed if DHT are to realise their potential in neurological rehabilitation.
Registration
The protocol was registered and is available from PROSPERO (CRD42021268984).


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