Int J Telemed Appl. 2013;2013:482324. Epub 2013 Dec 4.
mHealth in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Author information
- 1Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Medical School for International Health, New York, NY 10032, USA.
- 2NYU School of Medicine, Bellevue Hospital Center, New York, NY 10016, USA.
Abstract
Mobile
phone penetration rates have reached 63% in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)
and are projected to pass 70% by 2013. In SSA, millions of people who
never used traditional landlines now use mobile phones on a regular
basis. Mobile health, or mHealth, is the utilization of short messaging
service (SMS), wireless data transmission, voice calling, and smartphone
applications to transmit health-related information or direct care.
This systematic review analyzes and summarizes key articles from the
current body of peer-reviewed literature on PubMed on the topic of
mHealth in SSA. Studies included in the review demonstrate that mHealth
can improve and reduce the cost of patient monitoring, medication
adherence, and healthcare worker communication, especially in rural
areas. mHealth has also shown initial promise in emergency and disaster
response, helping standardize, store, analyze, and share patient
information. Challenges for mHealth implementation in SSA include
operating costs, knowledge, infrastructure, and policy
among many others. Further studies of the effectiveness of mHealth
interventions are being hindered by similar factors as well as a lack of
standardization in study design. Overall, the current evidence is not
strong enough to warrant large-scale implementation of existing mHealth
interventions in SSA, but rapid progress of both infrastructure and
mHealth-related research in the region could justify scale-up of the
most promising programs in the near future.
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