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  4. CARE-HOUSE: developing a framework for conceptualizing social implications of digital health technologies in palliative care
 
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CARE-HOUSE: developing a framework for conceptualizing social implications of digital health technologies in palliative care

Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.17089
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2026-04-27
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Öhl, Natalie  
Steigleder, Tobias  
Hille, Eva Maria  
Braun, Matthias  
Weisser, Alina  
Muehlensiepen, Felix  
Vossiek, Martin  
Eskofier, Björn  
Kölpin, Alexander  orcid-logo
Hochfrequenztechnik E-3  
Dabrock, Peter  
Forbes, Cynthia C.
Ostgathe, Christoph  
Heckel, Maria  
TORE-DOI
10.15480/882.17089
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/63030
Journal
BMC palliative care  
Volume
25
Issue
1
Article Number
116
Citation
BMC Palliative Care 25 (1): 116 (2026)
Publisher DOI
10.1186/s12904-026-02114-z
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-105037296081
Publisher
Springer
Background: The use of digital health technologies holds potential benefits for palliative care. Their implementation is fundamentally shifting routines and care practices. These shifts entail social implications that are complex, may emerge gradually and are challenging to identify. However, the social implications of digital health technologies are not conceptualized yet. This study addresses this gap by developing a framework on the social implications of digital technologies in palliative care, where the importance of social inclusion and interpersonal connection is particularly evident. Methods: We assessed the potential social implications of digital health technologies’ use in palliative care through a sequential research design using qualitative empirical methods of social research. Alongside conducting an iterative narrative literature review, we held multidisciplinary expert consultations using a conceptual mapping method and focus groups involving researchers, clinicians, and a patient and public involvement group, analyzed with qualitative structured content analysis. Results: Participants as well as the literature review identified key areas to the understanding and analysis of the social implications of digital health technologies in palliative care: principles and objectives of palliative care (patient-centered care, Total care, multiprofessional collaboration, relieving suffering, improving quality of life); the various actors involved in a specific care practice; the different roles they might have; the interactions among different actors; the tasks individual actors might carry out; the processes they are involved in; and the contexts they are embedded in. These factors were summarized and set out in the CARE-HOUSE Framework to conceptualize the social implications of digital health technologies’ use in palliative care and to support researchers in assessing the impacts of these technologies. Conclusions: The CARE-HOUSE Framework provides guidance for analyzing the social implications of digital health technologies in palliative care. It will be for future studies to evaluate the framework’s adaptability and scalability to diverse technologies and settings.
Subjects
Framework
Palliative care
Qualitative research
Social implications
Technology
DDC Class
616: Diseases
360: Social Problems, Social Services
610: Medicine, Health
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Publication version
publishedVersion
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s12904-026-02114-z.pdf

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1.55 MB

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