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 3762 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 5802 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

Improving medication adherence in stroke patients through Short Text Messages (SMS4Stroke)

An article from the BMC Neurology journal

Gathered by mFHAST 1 2168 Article rating: No rating

From the article abstract: "Stroke is a major cause of morbidity and mortality, especially in low and middle income countries. Medical management is the mainstay of therapy to prevent recurrence of stroke. Current estimates are that only 1 in 6 patients have perfect adherence to medication schedules. Using SMS (Short Messaging Service) as reminders to take medicines have been used previously for diseases such as diabetes and HIV with moderate success. We aim to explore the effectiveness and acceptability of SMS in increasing adherence to medications in patients with stroke."

mFHAST Implications: Feasibility and effectiveness of SMS in improving post stroke medication adherence in an LMIC setting

mHealth SMS text messaging interventions and to promote medication adherence: an integrative review

An article from the Journal of Clinical Nursing

Gathered by mFHAST 0 3566 Article rating: No rating

From the PubMed abstract: "This article is an integrative review of the evidence for mobile health Short Message Service text messages as an innovative and emerging intervention to promote medication adherence. Authors completed this review to draw conclusions and implications towards establishing a scientific foundation for use of text messages to promote medication adherence, thus informing clinical practice."

mFHAST Implications: Methods for text messaging interventions that promote medication adherence

Designing text-messaging (SMS) in HIV programs

An Article from the Pan African Medical Journal

mFHAST 0 4518 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

Exploring bi-directional and SMS messaging for communications between Public Health Agencies and their stakeholders: a qualitative study

An article from BioMed Public Health

Gathered by mFHAST 0 1917 Article rating: No rating

In efforts to increase public health communications this study investigated the use of bi-directional text messaging via SMS with community based organizations working with hard to reach populations.

This study provides considerations for mFHAST in terms of when bi-directional text messaging efforts may be of benefit to Public Health communication and surveillance campaigns.

Mobile phone messaging reminders for attendance at healthcare appointments (Review)

A Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews meta-analysis

Analyzed by M'lynda Owens 0 2418 Article rating: No rating

Authors' conclusions from the article: Low to moderate quality evidence included in this review shows that mobile phone text messaging reminders increase attendance at healthcare appointments compared to no reminders, or postal reminders. Text messaging reminders were similar to telephone reminders in terms of their effect on attendance rates, and cost less than telephone reminders. However, the included studies were heterogeneous and the quality of the evidence therein is low to moderate. Further, there is a lack of information about health effects, adverse effects and harms, user evaluation of the intervention and user perceptions of its safety. The current evidence therefore still remains insufficient to conclusively inform policy decisions.

mFHAST Implication: Mobile phone messaging applications, such as Short Message Service (SMS) and Multimedia Message Service (MMS), could provide an important, inexpensive delivery medium for reminders for healthcare appointments.

Diabetes Self-Management Smartphone Application for Adults With Type 1 Diabetes: Randomized Controlled Trial

An article from JMIR: doi: 10.2196/jmir.2588

Analyzed by M'lynda Owens 0 3012 Article rating: No rating

From the article abstract:

Methods

Patients were recruited through an online type 1 diabetes support group and letters mailed to adults with type 1 diabetes throughout Australia. In a 6-month intervention, followed by a three-month follow-up, patients (n=72) were randomized to usual care (control group) or usual care and the use of a smartphone application (Glucose Buddy) with weekly text-message feedback from a Certified Diabetes Educator (intervention group). All outcome measures were collected at baseline and every three months over the study period. Patients’ glycosylated hemoglobin levels (HbA1c) were measured with a blood test and diabetes-related self-efficacy, self-care activities, and quality of life were measured with online questionnaires.

Results

The mean age of patients was 35.20 years (SD 10.43) (28 male, 44 female), 39% (28/72) were male, and patients had been diagnosed with type 1 diabetes for a mean of 18.94 years (SD 9.66). Of the initial 72 patients, 53 completed the study (25 intervention, 28 control group). The intervention group significantly improved glycemic control (HbA1c) from baseline (mean 9.08%, SD 1.18) to 9-month follow-up (mean 7.80%, SD 0.75), compared to the control group (baseline: mean 8.47%, SD 0.86, follow-up: mean 8.58%, SD 1.16). No significant change over time was found in either group in relation to self-efficacy, self-care activities, and quality of life.

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