The effectiveness of eInterventions on reducing social isolation in older persons: A systematic review of systematic reviews.

Authors
Category Broad synthesis / Overview of systematic reviews
JournalJournal of telemedicine and telecare
Year 2017
As the older adult population group has been increasing in size, there has been evidence of growing social isolation and loneliness in their lives. The increased use of information communication technology and Internet-supported interventions has stimulated an interest in the benefits of eInterventions for older people and specifically in having a role in increasing social networks and decreasing loneliness. A systematic review of eInterventions to reduce loneliness in older people was conducted with the aim to synthesize high quality evidence on the effectiveness of eInterventions to decrease social isolation/loneliness for older people living in community/residential care. A systematic search of 12 databases for reviews published between 2000-2017 was conducted using search term synonyms for older people, social isolation and interventions. Three independent researchers screened articles and two reviewers extracted data. The Revised-Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews was used to assess the quality of reviews. The final search identified 12 reviews, which included 22 unique primary research studies evaluating eInterventions for social isolation or loneliness. The reviews were of moderate quality and the primary studies showed a lack of rigor. Loneliness was most frequently measured using the University California Los Angeles Loneliness Scale. Despite the limitations of the reviewed studies, there is inconsistent and weak evidence on using eInterventions for loneliness in older people.
Epistemonikos ID: 4ce7f82be7a938c10e9f455baa3b7a8548ae9792
First added on: Oct 01, 2017