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Interagency Working Group for mHealth February 24, 2010
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Focus of the Working Group Frame mHealth within global health strategy Apply public health standards and practices Emphasize appropriate, evidence-based, and scalable approaches in resource-poor settings Build capacity of implementing agencies
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February 24 th Agenda Review Health Affairs meeting Introduce mHealth Alliance Review mHealth Initiative conference Discuss Mobile Data Collection Guide Next meeting- April 6, 2010
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Health Affairs www.healthaffairs.org/ E-Health in Developing Countries
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Curioso, Universidad Peruana Privacy, not track names South-South, South-North (Text4baby)
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E-Health in Developing Countries Jaffe, Health Level 7: Interoperability = share and reuse data without loss or ambiguity. Maintain meaning for human and computer. Challenges: legacy technology, privacy and security, data w/o context degrades information.
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E-Health in Developing Countries Hersh, Oregon Health & Science University Building human capacity in informatics Focus on information, not technology Workflow, organizational and cultural context, Informatics professionalism, certificates
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Introduction to the mHealth Alliance
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Peggy D'Adamo, USAID mHealth Initiative International Networking Conference February 3-4, 2010 Washington, DC
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mHealth International Networking Conference 1 st conference organized by mHealth Initiative (http://www.mobih.org/)http://www.mobih.org/ 300 participants, including IT companies & developers Heavy focus on smart phones, esp. IPhone and IPad Heavy focus on the IT side of mHealth
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1 st Day Highlights Sybase – http://www.sybase.com Using sms for:http://www.sybase.com ▫Medication reminders ▫Health alerts Ramsell Technologies - http://www.ramselltechnologies.com/ Tele-adherence systems ▫Tailored messages for diabetes patients
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2 nd Day Breakout Sessions Using portable devices (flash drive/smart card) as electronic medical records Using mobile/wireless technology to promote behavior change and for prevention Creative use of mobile/wireless technology by health workers
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What do providers want? Bedside tools Voice activated tools Wireless tools
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What changes behavior in the medical profession? Being more efficient Being more effective Involving providers (especially nurses) in design and implementation Involving patients in design
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mHealth @ CDC Health promotion texting pilot program Text for Baby DOTs pilot with Danya/Kenya YouTube Videos Facebook Twitter Email updates, widgets, content syndication
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2 nd Day Highlights Keas ▫Started by Adam Bosworth (Google Health) ▫Online personal care plans
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First Technical Subgroup- Mobile Data Collection Guide Popular area of mHealth Provide direct and internal advantages Control over introduction and use of mHealth Especially interviewer-assisted surveys
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Potential Advantages Reduced error of data Reduced loss of data Faster data collection Reduced cost
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Reduced Error of Data Electronic format, automated checks and controls, faster data editing by supervisor Internal consistency Social desirability bias Quantitative versus qualitative
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Reduced Loss of Data Reports lost in transfer or storage Learning curve? Option of paper backup (offset advantages?)
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Faster Data Collection Electronic format, transmission speed, skip duplicate data entry, easier data editing Faster at which step, for which user? Additional training time
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Reduced Costs High initial costs: equipment, any programming Reduced variable cost: data entry Multiple uses to spread costs
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Discuss Mobile Data Collection Error, speed, data error and loss Resource requirements Design considerations Useful information sources Your M&E colleagues
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Next Steps Revise and update Mobile Data Collection Guide Provide Guide and sources in online format for review and discussion Plan next mHealth areas for next meeting
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Interagency Working Group for mHealth Integration Kelly Keisling kkeislin@jhuccp.org
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