Automated Behavioral Text Messaging and Face-to-Face Intervention for Parents of Overweight or Obese Preschool Children: Results From a Pilot Study

An article from JMIR (Journal of Medical Internet Research) DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.4398

Analyzed by M'lynda Owens 0 3744 Article rating: No rating

From the article abstract: Children are 5 times more likely to be overweight at the age of 12 years if they are overweight during the preschool period. The purpose of this study was to establish the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effects of a cognitive behavioral intervention (TEXT2COPE) synergized with tailored mobile technology (mHealth) on the healthy lifestyle behaviors of parents of overweight and obese preschoolers delivered in a primary care setting.

mFHAST Implication: Utilizing a cognitive behavioral skills intervention with SMS has great potential for supporting clinical care of overweight and obese preschool children and their families.

Feasibility and acceptability of SMS text messaging in a prostate cancer educational intervention for African American men

An article from the Health Informatics Journal

Gathered by mFHAST 0 2570 Article rating: No rating

From the article abstract: "African Americans' greater access to mobile phones makes short messaging service technology a promising complement to health promotion interventions. Short messaging service text messages were added to the Men's Prostate Awareness Church Training project, a men's health intervention for African American men. "

mFHAST Implications: Feasibility for use of SMS messages for prostate cancer education

Information and Communication Technology Use Among Low-Income Pregnant and Postpartum Women by Race and Ethnicity

An article from the Journal of Medical Internet Research

Nathan E Botts 0 2627 Article rating: No rating

Background posted in PubMed: "Pregnancy and the postpartum period provide windows of opportunity to impact perinatal and lifelong preventive health behavior for women and their families, but these opportunities are often missed. Understanding racial/ethnic differences in information and communication technology (ICT) use could inform technology-based interventions in diverse populations."

mFHAST Implications: Cultural differences in use of SMS for pregnancy-related communications

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