Podiatry
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/7
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Item The role of SmartWatch Technology in the provision of care for type 1 or type 2 Diabetes Mellitus or Gestational Diabetes: a systematic review.(JMIR, 2023-12-03) Alvarez, Sergio; Fellas, Antoni; Wynne, Kate; Santos, Derek; Sculley, Dean; Acharya, Shamasunder; Navathe, Pooshan; Girones, Xavier; Coda, AndreaBackground: The use of Smart technology in the management of all forms of diabetes mellitus has grown significantly in the past ten years. Technologies such as the SmartWatch have been proposed as a method of assisting in the monitoring of blood glucose levels as well as other alert prompts such as medication adherence and daily physical activity targets. These important outcomes reach across all forms of diabetes and have the potential to increase compliance of self-monitoring with the aim of improving long term outcomes such as HbA1c. Objective: This systematic review aims to explore the literature for evidence of SmartWatch technology in type 1,2 and gestational diabetes. Methods: A systematic review was undertaken by searching Ovid MEDLINE and CINAHL databases. A second search using all identified keywords and index terms was performed on Ovid MEDLINE (January 1966 to August 2023), EMBASE (January 1980 to August 2023), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (the Cochrane Library, latest issue), CINAHL (from 1982), IEEE Xplore, and ACM Digital Libraries, and Web of Science databases. Results: Five studies were included for qualitative synthesis in this review, however, none of these studies were randomised clinical trials and published research is currently focusing on usability and feasibility. Conclusions: This systematic review has highlighted the lack of robust randomised clinical trials that explore the efficacy of SmartWatch technology in the management of patients with type 1, 2 and gestational diabetes.Item Emerging tools to capture self-reported acute and chronic pain outcome in children and adolescents: A literature review(MDPI, 2022-01-25) Turnbull, Alexandra; Sculley, Dean; Santos, Derek; Maarj, Mohammed; Chapple, Lachlan; Gironès, Xavier; Fellas, Antoni; Coda, Andrea; Torres, Antoni; Ni, YichengThe advancement of digital health provides strategic and cost-effective opportunities for the progression of health care in children and adolescents. It is important for clinicians to be aware of the potential of emerging pain outcome measures and employ evidence-based tools capable of reliably tracking acute and chronic pain over time. The main emerging pain outcome measures for children and adolescents were examined. Overall, seven main texts and their corresponding digital health technologies were included in this study. The main findings indicated that the use of emerging digital health is able to reduce recall bias and can improve the real time paediatric data capture of acute and chronic symptoms. This literature review highlights new developments in pain management in children and adolescents and emphasizes the need for further research to be conducted on the use of emerging technologies in pain management. This may include larger scale, multicentre studies to further assess validity and reliability of these tools across various demographics. The privacy and security of mHealth data must also be carefully evaluated when choosing health applications that can be introduced into daily clinical settings.