Abstract

BackgroundThe use of mobile technology or smartphones has grown exponentially in the United States, allowing more individuals than ever internet access. This access has been especially critical to households earning less than US $30,000, the majority of whom indicate that smartphones are their main source of internet access. The increasing ubiquity of smartphones and virtual care promises to offset some of the health disparities that cut through the United States. However, disparities cannot be addressed if the medical information offered though smartphones is not accessible or reliable.ObjectiveThis study seeks to create a framework to review the strengths and weaknesses of mobile Health (mHealth) apps for diverse, low-income populations.MethodsFocusing on smoking cessation, diabetes management, and medication adherence as models of disease management, we describe the process for selecting, evaluating, and obtaining patient feedback on mHealth apps.ResultsThe top 2 scoring apps in each category were QuitNow! and Smoke Free-Quit Smoking Now for smoking cessation, Glucosio and MyNetDiary for diabetes management, and Medisafe and MyMeds for medication adherence.ConclusionsWe believe that this framework will prove useful for future mHealth app development, and clinicians and patient advisory groups in connecting culturally, educationally, and socioeconomically appropriate mHealth apps with low-income, diverse communities and thus work to bridge health disparities.

Highlights

  • The use of mobile technology has grown exponentially in the United States, and the COVID-19 pandemic both enforced the need for internet connectivity and laid bare disparities in access

  • Diabetes management, and medication adherence as models of disease management, we describe the process of selection of domains of mobile health (mHealth) apps, development of the rubric, and scoring of various mHealth apps

  • Domain Scoring Domains of usability and functionality for mHealth apps were assigned weighted scores depending on the importance the clinical experts gave to those categories for diverse, low-income communities

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The use of mobile technology has grown exponentially in the United States, and the COVID-19 pandemic both enforced the need for internet connectivity and laid bare disparities in access. The mobile health (mHealth) app market has flourished as consumers, health technology companies, and biomedical researchers have recognized mobile apps as a potential vehicle to lower barriers to accessing preventive medicine and promoting healthy behaviors. This extends to lower-income populations as well [6]. The use of mobile technology or smartphones has grown exponentially in the United States, allowing more individuals than ever internet access. This access has been especially critical to households earning less than US $30,000, the majority of whom indicate that smartphones are their main source of internet access. Disparities cannot be addressed if the medical information offered though smartphones is not accessible or reliable

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call