Ippoliti Nicole B, L'Engle Kelly
Global Health, Population, and Nutrition, FHI 360, 359 Blackwell Street, Suite 200, Durham, NC, 27701, USA.
School of Nursing and Health Professions, University of San Francisco, California, 2130 Fulton Street, San Francisco, CA, 94117, USA.
Reprod Health. 2017 Jan 17;14(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s12978-016-0276-z.
mHealth as a technical area has seen increasing interest and promise from both developed and developing countries. While published research from higher income countries on mHealth solutions for adolescent sexual and reproductive health (SRH) is growing, there is much less documentation of SRH mHealth interventions for youth living in resource-poor settings. We conducted a global landscape analysis to answer the following research question: How are programs using mHealth interventions to improve adolescent SRH in low to middle income countries (LMICs)?
To obtain the latest information about mHealth programs targeting youth SRH, a global call for project resources was issued in 2014. Information about approximately 25 projects from LMICs was submitted. These projects were reviewed to confirm that mobile phones were utilized as a key communication media for the program, that youth ages 10-24 were a prime target audience, and that the program used mobile phone features beyond one-on-one phone calls between youth and health professionals.
A total of 17 projects met our inclusion criteria. Most of these projects were based in Africa (67%), followed by Eurasia (26%) and Latin America (13%). The majority of projects used mHealth as a health promotion tool (82%) to facilitate knowledge sharing and behavior change to improve youth SRH. Other projects (18%) used mHealth as a way to link users to essential SRH services, including family planning counseling and services, medical abortion and post-abortion care, and HIV care and treatment. There was little variation in delivery methods for SRH content, as two-thirds of the projects (70%) relied on text messaging to transmit SRH information to youth. Several projects have been adapted and scaled to other countries.
Findings suggest that mHealth interventions are becoming a more common method to connect youth to SRH information and services in LMICs, and evidence is emerging that mobile phones are an effective way to reach young people and to achieve knowledge and behavior change. More understanding is needed about the challenges of data privacy and phone access, especially among younger adolescents, and the role that mHealth solutions for adolescent SRH should play in health programming for young people.
移动健康作为一个技术领域,已引起发达国家和发展中国家越来越多的关注,并展现出广阔前景。虽然高收入国家关于青少年性与生殖健康(SRH)移动健康解决方案的已发表研究不断增加,但针对生活在资源匮乏环境中的青少年的SRH移动健康干预措施的文献却少得多。我们进行了一项全球现状分析,以回答以下研究问题:中低收入国家(LMICs)的项目如何利用移动健康干预措施来改善青少年的SRH?
为获取有关针对青少年SRH的移动健康项目的最新信息,2014年发布了一项全球项目资源征集活动。收到了来自LMICs的约25个项目的信息。对这些项目进行了审查,以确认手机被用作该项目的关键通信媒介,10至24岁的青少年是主要目标受众,并且该项目使用了手机除青少年与健康专业人员一对一通话之外的功能。
共有17个项目符合我们的纳入标准。这些项目大多位于非洲(67%),其次是欧亚大陆(26%)和拉丁美洲(13%)。大多数项目将移动健康用作健康促进工具(82%),以促进知识共享和行为改变,从而改善青少年的SRH。其他项目(18%)将移动健康用作将用户与基本SRH服务联系起来的一种方式,包括计划生育咨询和服务、药物流产和流产后护理,以及艾滋病毒护理和治疗。SRH内容的传播方式差异不大,三分之二的项目(70%)依靠短信向青少年传播SRH信息。一些项目已被改编并推广到其他国家。
研究结果表明,在LMICs中,移动健康干预措施正成为将青少年与SRH信息和服务联系起来的一种更常见方法,并且有证据表明手机是接触年轻人并实现知识和行为改变的有效方式。需要更多地了解数据隐私和手机使用方面的挑战,尤其是在较年轻的青少年中,以及青少年SRH移动健康解决方案在年轻人健康规划中应发挥何种作用。