Abstract

Digital health development and use has been expansive and operationalized in a variety of settings and modalities around the world, including in low- and middle-income countries. Mobile applications have been developed for a variety of health professionals and frontline health workers including physicians, midwives, nurses, and community health workers. However, there are no published studies on the development and use of digital health related to human rights fieldwork and to our knowledge no mobile health platforms exist specifically for use by frontline health workers to forensically and clinically document sexual violence. We describe a participatory development and user design process with Congolese end-users of a novel human rights app for clinicians intended to standardize the documentation of sexual violence evidence for forensic and legal purposes, called MediCapt. The app, yet to be launched and still in the future proofing phase, has included several development phases: (1) initial needs assessment conducted in 2011, (2) prototype development and field-testing in 2014 with 8 Congolese physicians, (3) prototype refinement and field-testing in 2015 with 9 clinicians. Feedback from the first field-testing phase was incorporated into the design of the second prototype; key features that were added to MediCapt include the ability for users to take photographs and draw on a pictogram to include as part of the evidence package, as well as the ability to print a form with the completed data. Questionnaires and key-informant interviews during the second and third field-testing phases revealed overall positive attitudes about MediCapt, but multiple perceived and actual barriers to implementation were identified, from personal behaviors, such as individual clinicians' comfort with new technology, to more systemic and infrastructure factors, such as strong cultural preferences for print documentation of evidence and limited Internet connectivity. Next phases of development include consideration of patients' acceptance of this technology, how it actually fits in the clinical workflow, and testing of how to transfer the collected evidence to law enforcement and legal authorities. Ultimately, we plan on conducting a robust evaluation to assess effectiveness of the app on medical, legal, and human rights outcomes. We believe our experience of collecting data that will potentially serve as legal evidence broadens the traditional scope of digital health and crosses a wide range of fields including medical, technological, legal, and ethical, and thus propose refining and defining this unique field of exploration as mobile justice, or mJustice.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe move toward a technology-centered world has changed the way we practice medicine and public health

  • The move toward a technology-centered world has changed the way we practice medicine and public health. This is manifested by the rapid expansion in the field of digital health, which concerns the "use of information and communications technologies to improve human health, healthcare services, and wellness for individuals and across populations."[1] Within this broad field is the mobile health component that mJustice: Developing a Mobile App for Sexual Violence Documentation www.ghspjournal.org uses mobile technologies such as mobile phones and personal digital assistants (PDAs).[2]

  • We describe the early development phases of MediCapt, a first-of-its-kind forensic app, via a participatory design process[16] with physicians from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) who work with survivors of sexual violence, as well as present qualitative findings on their feedback on how to improve the technology and user experience (Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The move toward a technology-centered world has changed the way we practice medicine and public health. This is manifested by the rapid expansion in the field of digital health, which concerns the "use of information and communications technologies to improve human health, healthcare services, and wellness for individuals and across populations."[1] Within this broad field is the mobile health (mHealth) component that mJustice: Developing a Mobile App for Sexual Violence Documentation www.ghspjournal.org uses mobile technologies such as mobile phones and personal digital assistants (PDAs).[2]. Most digital health projects in low- and middleincome countries are conducted at relatively small scale, in the form of pilot projects, and the evidence for a positive impact on health outcomes of many such pilots is mixed.[2,7,8,9,10]

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