ORCID
- Hannah Bradwell: 0000-0002-9103-1069
- Katie Edwards: 0000-0001-6212-6010
- John Tredinnick‐Rowe: 0000-0002-1154-7410
- Arunangsu Chatterjee: 0000-0002-9506-6007
Abstract
AbstractIntroductionThe importance of meaningfully involving patients and the public in digital health innovation is widely acknowledged, but often poorly understood. This review, therefore, sought to explore how patients and the public are involved in digital health innovation and to identify factors that support and inhibit meaningful patient and public involvement (PPI) in digital health innovation, implementation and evaluation.MethodsSearches were undertaken from 2010 to July 2020 in the electronic databases MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Scopus and ACM Digital Library. Grey literature searches were also undertaken using the Patient Experience Library database and Google Scholar.ResultsOf the 10,540 articles identified, 433 were included. The majority of included articles were published in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada and Australia, with representation from 42 countries highlighting the international relevance of PPI in digital health. 112 topic areas where PPI had reportedly taken place were identified. Areas most often described included cancer (n = 50), mental health (n = 43), diabetes (n = 26) and long-term conditions (n = 19). Interestingly, over 133 terms were used to describe PPI; few were explicitly defined. Patients were often most involved in the final, passive stages of an innovation journey, for example, usability testing, where the ability to proactively influence change was severely limited. Common barriers to achieving meaningful PPI included data privacy and security concerns, not involving patients early enough and lack of trust. Suggested enablers were often designed to counteract such challenges.ConclusionsPPI is largely viewed as valuable and essential in digital health innovation, but rarely practised. Several barriers exist for both innovators and patients, which currently limits the quality, frequency and duration of PPI in digital health innovation, although improvements have been made in the past decade. Some reported barriers and enablers such as the importance of data privacy and security appear to be unique to PPI in digital innovation. Greater efforts should be made to support innovators and patients to become meaningfully involved in digital health innovations from the outset, given its reported benefits and impacts. Stakeholder consensus on the principles that underpin meaningful PPI in digital health innovation would be helpful in providing evidence-based guidance on how to achieve this.
DOI Link
Publication Date
2022-08-01
Publication Title
Health Expectations
Volume
25
Issue
4
ISSN
1369-6513
Acceptance Date
2022-04-03
Deposit Date
2022-06-30
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
First Page
1232
Last Page
1245
Recommended Citation
Baines, R., Bradwell, H., Edwards, K., Stevens, S., Prime, S., Tredinnick‐Rowe, J., Sibley, M., & Chatterjee, A. (2022) 'Meaningful patient and public involvement in digital health innovation, implementation and evaluation: A systematic review', Health Expectations, 25(4), pp. 1232-1245. Available at: 10.1111/hex.13506
