Abstract

BackgroundDigital health is poised to transform health care and redefine personalized health. As Internet and mobile phone usage increases, as technology develops new ways to collect data, and as clinical guidelines change, all areas of medicine face new challenges and opportunities. Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is one of many chronic diseases that may benefit from these advances in digital health. This review intends to lay a foundation for clinicians and technologists to understand future directions and opportunities together.ObjectiveThis review covers mobile health apps that have been used in IBD, how they have fit into a clinical care framework, and the challenges that clinicians and technologists face in approaching future opportunities.MethodsWe searched PubMed, Scopus, and ClinicalTrials.gov to identify mobile apps that have been studied and were published in the literature from January 1, 2010, to April 19, 2019. The search terms were (“mobile health” OR “eHealth” OR “digital health” OR “smart phone” OR “mobile app” OR “mobile applications” OR “mHealth” OR “smartphones”) AND (“IBD” OR “Inflammatory bowel disease” OR “Crohn's Disease” (CD) OR “Ulcerative Colitis” (UC) OR “UC” OR “CD”), followed by further analysis of citations from the results. We searched the Apple iTunes app store to identify a limited selection of commercial apps to include for discussion.ResultsA total of 68 articles met the inclusion criteria. A total of 11 digital health apps were identified in the literature and 4 commercial apps were selected to be described in this review. While most apps have some educational component, the majority of apps focus on eliciting patient-reported outcomes related to disease activity, and a few are for treatment management. Significant benefits have been seen in trials relating to education, quality of life, quality of care, treatment adherence, and medication management. No studies have reported a negative impact on any of the above. There are mixed results in terms of effects on office visits and follow-up.ConclusionsWhile studies have shown that digital health can fit into, complement, and improve the standard clinical care of patients with IBD, there is a need for further validation and improvement, from both a clinical and patient perspective. Exploring new research methods, like microrandomized trials, may allow for more implementation of technology and rapid advancement of knowledge. New technologies that can objectively and seamlessly capture remote data, as well as complement the clinical shift from symptom-based to inflammation-based care, will help the clinical and health technology communities to understand the full potential of digital health in the care of IBD and other chronic illnesses.

Highlights

  • GSMA Intelligence is the definitive source of global mobile operator data, analysis and forecasts, and publisher of authoritative industry reports and research

  • With connectivity becoming increasingly commoditised, mobile operators are looking to expand their role in the value chain – from providing essential tools and capabilities for ecosystem partners to build IoT solutions, to becoming end-to-end IoT solution providers themselves

  • Devices: while their ubiquity means smartphones remain the focal point of the consumer internet economy, the range of connected devices is greater than ever

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Summary

Bangladesh

Smartphone ubiquity across the world enables consumer engagement in numerous use cases. Watch free to access online video Pay for on-demand TV/movies Listen to free online music. Global mobile data usage will grow five-fold by 2024, spurred by increased smartphone adoption and availability of affordable high-speed networks. Regulatory intervention and intense competition continue to put pressure on operators’ traditional mobile revenue. Over a fifth of the world’s markets will have launched 5G by 2020, spending a combined $244 billion on networks in the process

Mobile contribution to economic growth
Expanding the benefits of the mobile internet
Mobile delivering social impact
The 5G era is here: where is the money?
Opportunities
Cost considerations
Dependencies
IoT: seizing a share of the trillion-dollar opportunity
Content: operators seeking to capitalise on rapidly evolving ecosystem
AI: transforming telcos
Devices: onset of a third wave focused on AI and immersive entertainment
Laying the regulatory groundwork
Findings
Regulatory reforms for the digital age
Full Text
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