Patients' Experiences of Nurse-Led eHealth Interventions for Chronic Heart Failure: Qualitative Systematic Review and Meta-Synthesis

Scritto il 06/07/2026
da Yifan Zhang

J Med Internet Res. 2026 Jul 6;28:e82714. doi: 10.2196/82714.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a major chronic condition in the context of global population aging and is associated with high prevalence, frequent rehospitalization, and high mortality. Self-management is widely recognized as an important factor influencing prognosis and quality of life among patients with CHF. Nurse-led eHealth interventions have been increasingly used in postdischarge CHF management and have shown potential for improving adherence and health-related behaviors. However, existing studies have predominantly focused on objective outcomes, and limited systematic synthesis has examined patients' subjective experiences, which may restrict the patient-centered optimization and sustainable implementation of these interventions.

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to systematically synthesize patients' experiences of nurse-led eHealth interventions for CHF, identify facilitators and barriers to engagement and implementation, and inform the patient-centered optimization of intervention design through a qualitative systematic review and meta-synthesis.

METHODS: This qualitative systematic review and meta-synthesis was conducted in accordance with the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology for qualitative systematic reviews. A comprehensive search was performed in PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, the Cochrane Library, CINAHL, CNKI, WanFang, and VIP from database inception to April 30, 2026, supplemented by manual searches of the reference lists of the included studies. Following methodological quality appraisal, the findings of the included studies were extracted and synthesized using thematic synthesis.

RESULTS: A total of 23 studies involving 424 patients with CHF were included, comprising 17 qualitative studies and 6 mixed methods studies. Four synthesized themes and 12 subthemes were generated: (1) patient empowerment and enhanced self-management, (2) sense of security and continuity of care under professional support, (3) variations in acceptance and emotional responses, and (4) barriers and challenges in implementing eHealth interventions.

CONCLUSIONS: Nurse-led eHealth interventions may provide important support for CHF management from the patient perspective by promoting empowerment and extending care support beyond hospital settings. The findings suggest that future intervention design should better address patient heterogeneity, technological usability, and long-term sustainability. Further efforts are needed to strengthen individualized adaptation and technological optimization to enhance the accessibility, acceptability, and patient-centered implementation of these interventions.

PMID:42406878 | DOI:10.2196/82714