Patient perceptions of an mHealth antiretroviral treatment support intervention in the HIVIND trial in South India.

An Article from the BMJ Open journal

Analyzed by Nathan Botts 0 3805 Article rating: No rating

From the Pub Med Abstract:"The recent explosion of mHealth applications in the area of HIV care has led to the development of mHealth interventions to support antiretroviral treatment adherence. Several of these interventions have been tested for effectiveness, but few studies have explored patient perspectives of such interventions. Exploring patient perspectives enhances the understanding of how an intervention works or why it does not. We therefore studied perceptions regarding an mHealth adherence intervention within the HIVIND trial in South India."
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mFHAST Implications: Design and implementation guidelines for the use of SMS interventions for HIV-related treatment and care

Text Message and Internet Support for Coronary Heart Disease Self-Management

An article from the Journal of Medical Internet Research

Gathered by mFHAST 0 5863 Article rating: No rating

From the PubMed abstract: "Mobile technology has the potential to deliver behavior change interventions (mHealth) to reduce coronary heart disease (CHD) at modest cost. Previous studies have focused on single behaviors; however, cardiac rehabilitation (CR), a component of CHD self-management, needs to address multiple risk factors."

mFHAST Implications: Opportunity for SMS interventions to increase adherence behavior changes needed to reduce coronary heart disease

Active recall to increase HIV and STI testing: a systematic review.

An article from the journal of Sexually Transmitted Infections

Gathered by mFHAST 0 3045 Article rating: No rating

From the PubMed Abstract: "Active recall can improve reattendance rates and could increase retesting rates and detection of HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs), but the best strategy remains uncertain."

mFHAST Implications: Opportunity for SMS messages to increase active recall to improve HIV and STI testing rates

Designing text-messaging (SMS) in HIV programs

An Article from the Pan African Medical Journal

mFHAST 0 4568 Article rating: No rating

From the Pub Med Abstract:"Text messages (SMS) are being increasingly integrated into HIV programs across Southern Africa to improve patient adherence, linkage to care and provide psycho-social support. Careful attention needs to be paid to the design of SMS-based interventions for clients of HIV-care services to ensure that any potential harm, such as unwanted disclosure of HIV status, is minimized."

mFHAST Implications: Design and implementation guidelines for the use of SMS interventions for HIV-related treatment and care

Interventions to promote adherence to antiretroviral therapy in Africa

An article from the Lancet HIV journal

Gathered by mFHAST 0 2182 Article rating: No rating

From the article abstract: "We searched for randomised trials of interventions to promote antiretroviral adherence within adults in Africa. We searched AMED, CINAHL, Embase, Medline (via PubMed), and ClinicalTrials.gov from inception to Oct 31, 2014, with the terms "HIV", "ART", "adherence", and "Africa". We created a network of the interventions by pooling the published and individual patients' data for comparable treatments and comparing them across the individual interventions with Bayesian network meta-analyses. The primary outcome was adherence defined as the proportion of patients meeting trial defined criteria; the secondary endpoint was viral suppression."

mFHAST Implications: Opportunities for SMS messages to increase adherence to HIV antiretroviral therapies 

A combination strategy for enhancing linkage to and retention in HIV care among adults newly diagnosed with HIV in Mozambique

An article from BMC Infectious Diseases

Gathered by mFHAST 0 1716 Article rating: No rating

From the PubMed Abstract: "Despite the extraordinary scale up of HIV prevention, care and treatment services in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) over the past decade, the overall effectiveness of HIV programs has been significantly hindered by high levels of attrition across the HIV care continuum. Data from "real-life" settings are needed on the effectiveness of an easy to deliver package of services that can improve overall performance of the HIV care continuum."

mFHAST Implications: Effectiveness of SMS reminders to increase health care retention of those diagnosed with HIV

Acceptability and factors associated with willingness to receive short messages for improving antiretroviral therapy adherence in China

An article from the Aids Care journal

Nathan E Botts 0 358 Article rating: No rating

From the PubMed article abstract: "This study aimed to understand the acceptability of short message service (SMS) as a reminder for improving antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence and determine the factors associated with willingness to accept SMS among people living HIV (PLH) in China."

mFHAST Implications: Opportunities for SMS messages to increase adherence to HIV antiretroviral therapies

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