Posts Tagged ‘sms’

Now Reading: “Texting and Other E-Tools to Manage Chronic Disease” and “Health via Cell Phone in Mexico”

February 19th, 2010 | Popularity: 4%
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As I alluded to in my post yesterday, this month’s issue of Health Affairs is devoted to E-Health in the developing world, a great validation of the importance of learning from this trend, given this journal’s ability to attract the best authors.

With that in mind, I eagerly approached these two.

The first, Kahn JG, Yang JS, Kahn JS. ‘Mobile’ Health Needs And Opportunities In Developing Countries [Internet]. Health Aff 2010 Feb;29(2):252-258. , attracted me because its lead author, James Kahn, MD, is an innovator in the developing world, through his work to support patients with AIDS in San Francisco. I was fortunate to meet Jim in previous work (and blogged about it here) and think his perspective is very valuable to people thinking about mHealth.

This article is particularly useful for the mHealth inexperienced (that’s me) as well as the mHealth and eHealth inexperienced. For those of us that live in the stew of innovation, we forget that most people don’t know what we mean when we say, “mHealth,” so starting off with a helpful definition is great (“the use of wireless communication devices to support public health and clinical practice”).

Beyond basic definitional elements, the article has a nice table of mHealth applications listed, along with their potential benefits and risks. The article also links to a report that was mentioned in the HealthAffairs briefing that also seems worthwhile. You can find that report here. The most important thing that the authors state is this:

“We found minimal formal evaluation of m-health.”

So, as much as it excites me/us for its potential, we have to remember that it doesn’t yet excite us for its outcomes. I/we have been here/there before with eHealth and the web, so we understand the dance, and in retrospect it seems that in the absence of hard evidence, these technologies will be used; however, they may be more strongly used to provide better service and access rather than hard clinical outcomes. And, this is okay, service and access to health care (and let’s say, prevention and primary care specifically) do improve health. But why not be aspirational this time around, right?

The second article,  Feder JL. Cell-Phone Medicine Brings Care To Patients In Developing Nations [Internet]. Health Aff 2010 Feb;29(2):259-263., is a description piece about some of the innovation that’s happening in Mexico City. As I remarked yesterday, the article dropped a big bomb for me when it mentioned that giving patients access to their medical records is prohibited by law. It’s part of the description of the background that results in the innovation that is seen there, and, as usual, I see lots of parallels to our health system here.

I did notice one review article mentioned here that was not mentioned in the Kahn article above, that you can see the reference for here, which reviews some outcomes from SMS.

Specific services are discussed covering the areas of cardiovascular disease and HIV, co-created with Voxiva, who I also met last year (and who are behind the new Text4Baby service). When it comes to the next service, Diabetes, there’s an implication in the article that this is taking longer to launch, and maybe (or maybe not) this highlights some of the limitations of text-based mHealth services.

Whether there are limitations or not, however, the environment that this work is happening is going to push toward removing hurdles, not creating them. In this sense, discovery about how to use mHealth is more likely to be global, which can only foster the best kind of innovation, the kind crosses borders, not just physically, but nationally and experientially as well.


6 Reasons why mHealth is different than eHealth

February 18th, 2010 | Popularity: 10%
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In Mexico, it’s illegal for patients to access their own medical records, and 9.1 percent of Mexicans have an Internet connection at home. 80 percent of them have at least one cell phone.

Conditions like this don’t stifle innovation, they ignite it, and it’s one of the several reasons I think mHealth (“the use of wireless communication devices to support public health and clinical practice”) is different than eHealth (which I’m referring to as desktop Web/computer interaction in health/health care).

I credit Susannah Fox, the Internet’s Informant General, for stimulating the thinking. In 2008 at Health 2.0 in San Diego, she said, “Recruit doctors, let e-patients lead, go mobile” and the data she has been generating since has ceaselessly has been pointing to that reality.

More recently, Washington, DC, hosted the mHealth Initiative Networking Conference last week, and this week, Health Affairs hosted a briefing on their latest issue on E-Health in the Developing World (side note, I know I’m behind in noticing this, but I love HealthAffairs new print form factor – less tome-y and more open).

The mHealth Networking Conference was remarkable for me in terms of the spark I noticed on the part of the attendees and the slightly different focus – a little more public health-y, a little more do-great-things-for-society-y. And, I’m going to say it, a little more exciting for someone like me because of the possibilities that go beyond the desktop web. To learn about them in the City where people believe everything is possible, because it is, is just icing on the cake.

So here’s my list:

#1: When we talk about the web, we still worry about the people who are just not online. According to Susannah’s team, its hovering at 26 %. mHealth is different, everyone has a cell phone or is going to get one, relatively speaking. If you compare use visually, the cell phone thermometer shows much greater penetration – all groups are “pushed up” to higher degrees of access.

Speaking of Mexico and the developing world, the parallels are relevant in the United States to vulnerable populaition, and this is another key difference. Desktop web access favors more educated, more affluent people. There’s an inverse relationship when it comes to wireless. Look at this data from December: If you look carefully, you’ll see something amazing. Access statistics for Black and Hispanic respondents are higher for wireless access to the Internet than for Whites. It’s almost as if the “haves/have nots” are reversed. For people interested in reducing disparities, this is…kind of huge. That’s difference #2.

Difference #3 has to do with ease of set-up. When I speak with iPhone developers or people involved in mobile, I hear the words “difficult, challenging,” which is different than what we heard in 1995 when anyone (me included) could code an HTML page and put it up.

Difference #4, when we talk about the web, there’s not a discussion of telecommunications companies and their innovation. When we talk about mHealth, we have to include telecommunications companies. This year at HIMSS10 , in Atlanta, it’s not Sanjay Gupta, MD (whose work I have great respect for) that I want to see speak the most. it’s Dan Hesse, CEO of Sprint/Nextel. People with telecommunications experience, in my opinion will be very important moving forward. In a analogous way, I am as drawn to the CTIA as I am to AMIA .

Susan calls it

Susan calls it

Difference #5, Reverse Innovation – Unlike the web, a lot of the “cool” stuff has already been pioneered, outside of the United States. Susan Dentzer said it best at the Health Affairs briefing: ” Clearly the US is the developing country when it comes to mHealth“. The term reverse innovation comes from General Electric (this article from Harvard Business Review explains it) , and it means that a lot of the inventing to be done is happening in India, China, South America, and as the article linked to above points out, in Mexico. What may work best is something that comes from a place with far less resources than we have. Kind of what health care, a resource-poor industry when it comes to innovation at the level of public health and primary care, needs.

ZipHealth

ZipHealth: Where would you rather track your health; here, or on a desktop website?

Difference #6, it’s more personal. Some of the apps we saw last week, and others I am hearing about, are things that might not work on the desktop web so well, because a desktop or laptop is not as “personal” a device. The idea of storing information on a web site and forwarding to your doctor seems to make more sense on a mobile phone, because it’s something you hold that’s yours, that you can “share” with someone. Not the same for a web site on a computer.

I want to clarify that this is not 6 reasons why mHealth is better or has more scientific evidence behind it. This is just differences. I’ll report on two great papers in the Health Affairs issue on this shortly.

Comments/additions/subtractions welcome.


Using text messages to report medication inventory in Africa

February 8th, 2010 | Popularity: 3%
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Using text messages to report medication inventory in Africa – From Dr. Jay Parkinson's new venture, a great use of SMS in Africa. I am going to post on my experience at the mHealth Networking conference tomorrow. I think innovations like this are worth noting – accessible to all and not requiring of a lot of high-tech equipment. I think a new revolution is coming.