Abstract

Several recently published studies and consensus statements have demonstrated that there is only modest (and in many cases, low-quality) evidence that mobile health (mHealth) can improve patient clinical outcomes such as the length of stay or reduction of readmissions. There is also uncertainty as to whether mHealth can improve patient-centered outcomes such as patient engagement or patient satisfaction. One principal challenge behind the “effectiveness” research in this field is a lack of common understanding about what it means to be effective in the digital space (ie, what should constitute a relevant outcome and how best to measure it). In this viewpoint, we call for interdisciplinary, conceptual clarity on the definitions, methodologies, and patient-centered outcomes frequently used in mHealth research. To formulate our recommendations, we used a snowballing approach to identify relevant definitions, outcomes, and methodologies related to mHealth. To begin, we drew heavily upon previously published detailed frameworks that enumerate definitions and measurements of engagement. We built upon these frameworks by extracting other relevant measures of patient-centered care, such as patient satisfaction, patient experience, and patient activation. We describe several definitional inconsistencies for key constructs in the mHealth literature. In an effort to achieve clarity, we tease apart several patient-centered care outcomes, and outline methodologies appropriate to measure each of these patient-care outcomes. By creating a common pathway linking definitions with outcomes and methodologies, we provide a possible interdisciplinary approach to evaluating mHealth technologies. With the broader goal of creating an interdisciplinary approach, we also provide several recommendations that we believe can advance mHealth research and implementation.

Highlights

  • Mobile health is defined by the Word Health Organization as “medical and public health practice supported by mobile devices, such as mobile phones, patient monitoring devices, personal digital assistance, and other wireless devices” [1,2]. mHealth is considered the future of health care [3,4], and many health care organizations have embraced mHealth as part of their patient-centered initiatives

  • We call for interdisciplinary, conceptual clarity on the definitions, methodologies, and patient-centered outcomes frequently used in mHealth research

  • An international collaboration could build upon our work to develop exhaustive criteria and methodology standards for how to design, produce, implement, and evaluate digital technologies. In this Viewpoint, we called for interdisciplinary, conceptual clarity on the definitions, methodologies, and patient-centered outcomes frequently used in mHealth research

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Summary

Background

Mobile health (mHealth) is defined by the Word Health Organization as “medical and public health practice supported by mobile devices, such as mobile phones, patient monitoring devices, personal digital assistance, and other wireless devices” [1,2]. mHealth is considered the future of health care [3,4], and many health care organizations have embraced mHealth as part of their patient-centered initiatives. The extent to which mHealth technologies influence or impact patient-centered care is unclear [6], which is likely owing to the imprecision in definitions, methodological approaches, and disjointed interests of multiple stakeholders within health care organizations and industry [2]. Similar to patient decision aids, the successful implementation of patient-centered mHealth requires multidisciplinary teams from academia, industry, and health care management sectors, along with patients and consumers working collaboratively to maintain the requisite medical, statistical, information technology, patient-centered, and research expertise necessary to implement and evaluate mHealth technologies [95], which an international collaboration would afford. An international collaboration could build upon our work to develop exhaustive criteria and methodology standards for how to design, produce, implement, and evaluate digital technologies

Conclusion
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