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Targeted Digital Health Intervention in End-of-Life and Hospice Care: A Scoping Review

Authors
 Misun Jeon  ;  Heejung Jeon  ;  Sanghee Kim 
Citation
 JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, Vol.81(9) : 5678-5690, 2025-09 
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING
ISSN
 0309-2402 
Issue Date
2025-09
MeSH
Digital Health ; Female ; Hospice Care* ; Humans ; Male ; Telemedicine* ; Terminal Care*
Keywords
digital health ; end‐of‐life care ; hospice care ; scoping review ; terminal care
Abstract
Aim: Digital health interventions, including health analytics, telehealth, mHealth and digitised healthcare systems, are rapidly advancing and demonstrate effectiveness in palliative care. Although end-of-life (EOL) and hospice care are within palliative care, they differ in outcomes, target populations and delivery systems. This review examines research trends to guide digital health strategies for EOL and hospice care.

Design: Scoping review.

Data sources: Systematic searches in CINAHL, MEDLINE, SCOPUS, EMBASE, Cochrane and Web of Science identified studies from 2019 to 2023 using keywords 'end of life', 'hospice' and 'digital health'.

Methods: Following the Joanna Briggs Institute framework, two reviewers independently screened studies, extracted data and categorised health challenges and digital health types per World Health Organization and Deloitte classifications.

Results: Among 4342 studies, 38 met the inclusion criteria. Most were retrospective (36.8%) without control groups (68.3%). Key targets included healthcare systems (44.2%) and patients (25.6%), focusing on health analytics (44.7%) and mHealth (23.7%) for EOL transitions and symptom management. Main challenges included utilisation (34.9%), efficiency (32.6%) and quality (30.2%).

Conclusion: Digital health interventions hold potential for enhancing EOL and hospice care but face challenges such as study design limitations, appropriate modality selection, rapport-building and risks of exacerbating health inequalities. Future interventions should emphasise human-centred digital capabilities for healthcare providers and user-centred designs.

Impact: This review highlights opportunities for digital health to improve quality of life for EOL and hospice patients and caregivers. The insights provide guidance for applying digital health interventions in different settings and highlight the importance of equipping healthcare providers with human-centred digital competencies.

Reporting method: The reporting was guided by the PRISMA extension for scoping reviews (PRISMA-ScR).

Patient or public contribution: No patient or public contribution.
Files in This Item:
T202500805.pdf Download
DOI
10.1111/jan.16734
Appears in Collections:
3. College of Nursing (간호대학) > Dept. of Nursing (간호학과) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Kim, Sanghee(김상희) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9806-2757
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/207569
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