Barriers and facilitators to acceptance and implementation of eMental-health intervention among older adults: A qualitative systematic review.

Journal: Digital health

Volume: 10

Issue: 

Year of Publication: 

Affiliated Institutions:  Xiangya School of Nursing, Central South University, Changsha, Hunan, China.

Abstract summary 

Electronic mental health interventions are effective but not well promoted currently among older adults. This study sought to systematically review and summarize the barriers and facilitators of accepting and implementing electronic mental health interventions among older adults.We comprehensively retrieved six electronic databases from January 2012 to September 2022: PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, Scopus, PsycINFO, and CINAHL. The JBI-QARI was used to assess the quality of the research methodology of each publication. Eligible studies underwent data coding and synthesis aligned to inductive and deductive methods. The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research 2.0 was used as a deductive framework to guide a more structured analysis.The systematic review screened 4309 articles, 17 of which were included (eight with mixed methods and nine with qualitative methods). We identified and extracted the barriers and facilitators of accepting and implementing electronic mental health interventions among older adults: (1) innovation: technology challenges, optimized functions, and contents, security and privacy; (2) outer setting: community engagement and partnerships, financing; (3) inner setting: leadership engagement, available resources, incompatibility, intergenerational support, training and guidance; (4) individuals: perceptions, capability, motivation of older adults and healthcare providers; and (5) implementation process: recruit, external assistance, and team.These findings are critical to optimizing, promoting, and expanding electronic mental health interventions among older adults. The systematic review also provides a reference for better evidence-based implementation strategies in the future.

Authors & Co-authors:  Peng Li Guo Ning Huang Jiang Feng Liu

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations :  Organization WH. Ageing and Health, 2022.
Authors :  8
Identifiers
Doi : 20552076241234628
SSN : 2055-2076
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
barriers;eMental health;facilitators;older adults;qualitative systematic review
Study Design
Study Approach
Qualitative,Mixed Methods
Country of Study
Publication Country
United States