March 27, 2023

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Study finds the quality of most dementia apps is insufficient

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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Memory training, exercises to improve brain fitness, early detection tests for dementia or tools to help caregivers organize their daily schedule: The range of apps for people with dementia and their care-giving relatives is very wide.

A team of researchers at FAU and digiDEM Bayern (the digital register for Bavaria) has now evaluated the scientific evidence and quality for users of German language apps for people with dementia and their care-giving relatives for the first time and has come to two sobering conclusions.

There is no scientific evidence for the efficacy of most of the dementia apps available that are commercially available. In addition, many of the dementia apps only offer a mediocre user experience.

Germany has significant room for improvement when it comes to digitalization in the health service. At the same time, digital health applications continue to gain popularity. They are easy to download from app stores and can be used any time, anywhere.

"Many of the dementia apps are only of a mediocre overall quality," says Michael Zeiler from the Chair of Medical Informatics at FAU who is a research associate in the digiDEM Bayern project.

The aim of the study was to evaluate the benefits of German-language mobile health applications for people with dementia and their care-giving relatives.

The study used the German version of the internationally recognized Mobile App Rating Scale (MARS-D) The criteria for assessing user experience included functionality, design, and questions relating to and the quality of therapy.

"Patient safety received the lowest and worst score," explains Michael Zeiler. "This concerns questions about possible risks and damaging effects such as the wrong feedback and incorrect information."

No scientific evidence of efficacy for several apps

Zeiler and his team investigated the scientific evidence behind a total of 20 health apps. The quality of several of the supposed "digital aids" was also disappointing in this aspect. "There is absolutely no for the efficacy of most of the dementia apps. If users have to pay for dementia apps that have no proof that they are effective, then this is 'digital charlatanism'," explains neurologist and health economist Prof. Dr. Peter Kolominsky-Rabas.

Studies had been carried out on only six apps, or only 30 percent of the apps. Conversely, the researchers also discovered that were often published about apps that had good quality assessment ratings.

More transparency and information required for the public

"The better researched health apps are, the more successful healthcare will be and therefore the more transparent the market for digital health apps will be," says Michael Zeiler.

With the exception of a small number of apps, health apps are not considered . An app must first undergo testing by the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (BfArM) before it can be listed as a digital health app in Germany. The aim of this testing is to increase the transparency on the market in terms of which apps actually meet the requirements regarding safety, functional capability, quality, data protection and data security.

"There is not always any evidence of the positive effect on health. We therefore urgently recommend that regular quality control checks are performed on these apps according to strict scientific criteria that conform to international standards," says Prof. Dr. Peter Kolominsky-Rabas, who is a co-author of the study.

The researchers divided the apps they investigated into four categories.

The work (in German) is published in the journal Zeitschrift für Evidenz, Fortbildung und Qualität im Gesundheitswesen.

More information: Michael Zeiler et al, Wissenschaftliche Evidenz und Nutzerqualität von Mobile-Health-Anwendungen für Menschen mit kognitiven Beeinträchtigungen und deren Angehörige, Zeitschrift für Evidenz, Fortbildung und Qualität im Gesundheitswesen (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.zefq.2023.01.003

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