The potential of digital health technologies in saving nursing resources: A scoping review

Background

The global nursing shortage crisis presents a significant challenge to healthcare systems. Digital health technologies, such as communication tools, automation systems, monitoring devices, and information platforms have been proposed as one solution to alleviate the issue by optimizing nursing resources. However, a comprehensive overview of the use and potential of these technologies in optimizing nurses' work and resources is still lacking.

Objectives

The aim of this review is to provide an overview of (a) the digital health technologies used in nursing that may have potential to save nursing resources, (b) which indicators are used to measure the effectiveness of these technologies, and (c) which technologies are found to be effective in terms of saving nursing resources.

Methods

We followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for scoping reviews in accordance with the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) Manual for Evidence Synthesis. The databases PubMed, CINAHL, and Web of Science were searched. Studies were included if they were peer-reviewed, quantitative, addressed nursing professionals, and considered digital health technologies that specifically aimed to save nursing resources. Relevant data were extracted and synthesized narratively, using an emerging framework.

Results

A total of 115 studies were included in this review. Digital health technologies fell into four categories: communication, automation, monitoring, and information technologies. All showed potential for saving resources, with monitoring technologies most often reported as having high potential. Indicators used to measure effectiveness focused on temporal, workforce, and workload resources, and related outcomes including quality of care, patient safety, and cost efficiency. Workforce resources were the most frequently optimized, followed by improvements in patient safety and quality of care. While positive effects were predominant, some studies reported adverse and insignificant effects, indicating variability in effectiveness.

Conclusions

Digital health technologies offer promising opportunities to alleviate nursing resource shortages, but their potential seem to vary by type. Monitoring technologies showed the most consistent benefits, while communication and information technologies had mixed effects and automation technologies require further research to clarify their potential. Given the wide range of indicators used to measure potential resource savings, defining common, standardized indicators is essential for systematically assessing the impact of digital health technologies on nursing work and resources. This would enable comparability across studies, strengthen evidence-based decision-making and guide implementation strategies.

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