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J Am Med Inform Assoc 2001;8:62-79 doi:10.1136/jamia.2001.0080062
  • Original Investigation
  • Research Paper

Review of Computer-generated Outpatient Health Behavior Interventions

Clinical Encounters “in Absentia”

  1. Debra Revere,
  2. Peter J Dunbar
  1. Affiliation of the authors: University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
  1. Correspondence and reprints: Debra Revere, MA, MLIS, University of Washington, IAIMS Program, Box 357155, Seattle WA 98195-7155; email: <drevere{at}u.washington.edu>
  • Received 16 March 2000
  • Accepted 21 August 2000

Abstract

Objective To evaluate evidence of the effectiveness of computer-generated health behavior interventions—clinical encounters “in absentia”—as extensions of face-to-face patient care in an ambulatory setting.

Data Sources Systematic electronic database and manual searches of multiple sources (1996–1999) plus search for gray literature were conducted to identify clinical trials using computer-generated health behavior interventions to motivate individuals to adopt treatment regimens, focusing on patient-interactive interventions and use of health behavior models.

Study Selection Eligibility criteria included randomized controlled studies with some evidence of instrument reliability and validity; use of at least one patient-interactive targeted or tailored feedback, reminder, or educational intervention intended to influence or improve a stated health behavior; and an association between one intervention variable and a health behavior.

Data Extraction Studies were described by delivery device (print, automated telephone, computer, and mobile communication) and intervention type (personalized, targeted, and tailored). We employed qualitative methods to analyze the retrieval set and explore the issue of patientinteractive computer-generated behavioral intervention systems.

Data Synthesis Studies varied widely in methodology, quality, subject number, and characteristics, measurement of effects and health behavior focus. Of 37 eligible trials, 34 (91.9 percent) reported either statistically significant or improved outcomes. Fourteen studies used targeted interventions; 23 used tailored. Of the 14 targeted intervention studies, 13 (92.9 percent) reported improved outcomes. Of the 23 tailored intervention studies, 21 (91.3 percent) reported improved outcomes.

Conclusions The literature indicates that computer-generated health behavior interventions are effective. While there is evidence that tailored interventions can more positively affect health behavior change than can targeted, personalized or generic interventions, there is little research comparing different tailoring protocols with one another. Only those studies using print and telephone devices reported a theoretic basis for their methodology. Future studies need to identify which models are best suited to which health behavior, whether certain delivery devices are more appropriate for different health behaviors, and how ambulatory care can benefit from patients' use of portable devices.

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