Abstract

This review will assess the effectiveness and usability of mobile health applications to improve medication adherence in patients with heart failure. Poor medication adherence by heart failure patients is a major cause of negative clinical outcomes, high rates of hospital readmissions, and death, thereby increasing costs for patients and the health care system. Several studies have shown that the use of mobile health applications improves self-care by heart failure patients, including medication adherence. Therefore, gathering evidence on these studies will help researchers and clinicians understand the impact of such interventions on patient care. Eligible studies will evaluate medication adherence in participants aged ≥18 years diagnosed with heart failure who are using app-based (software) interventions. Experimental and observational studies will be included. We will exclude studies with interventions that used mobile applications without functionality to assist the user in organizing and taking their medications. Articles published from database inception to the present day, without language restrictions, will be selected from Embase, MEDLINE, LILACS, Scopus, Web of Science, CINAHL, and the Cochrane Library. Two independent reviewers will screen articles, assess methodological quality, and extract data using JBI assessment and extraction instruments. Discrepancies will be solved by consensus and a third reviewer will be consulted if necessary. A narrative synthesis of findings will be presented, and statistical analysis will be used when appropriate. PROSPERO CRD42020147816.

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