scholarly journals Mobile Health Initiatives in Vietnam: Scoping Study

2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. e106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey A Lam ◽  
Linh Thuy Dang ◽  
Ngoc Tran Phan ◽  
Hue Thi Trinh ◽  
Nguyen Cong Vu ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey A Lam ◽  
Linh Thuy Dang ◽  
Ngoc Tran Phan ◽  
Hue Thi Trinh ◽  
Nguyen Cong Vu ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Mobile health (mHealth) offers a promising solution to the multitude of challenges the Vietnamese health system faces, but there is a scarcity of published information on mHealth in Vietnam. OBJECTIVE The objectives of this scoping study were (1) to summarize the extent, range, and nature of mHealth initiatives in Vietnam and (2) to examine the opportunities and threats of mHealth utilization in the Vietnamese context. METHODS This scoping study systematically identified and extracted relevant information from 20 past and current mHealth initiatives in Vietnam. The study includes multimodal information sources, including published literature, gray literature (ie, government reports and unpublished literature), conference presentations, Web-based documents, and key informant interviews. RESULTS We extracted information from 27 records from the electronic search and conducted 14 key informant interviews, allowing us to identify 20 mHealth initiatives in Vietnam. Most of the initiatives were primarily funded by external donors (n=15), while other initiatives were government funded (n=1) or self-funded (n=4). A majority of the initiatives targeted vulnerable and hard-to-reach populations (n=11), aimed to prevent the occurrence of disease (n=12), and used text messaging (short message service, SMS) as part of their intervention (n=14). The study revealed that Vietnamese mHealth implementation has been challenged by factors including features unique to the Vietnamese language (n=4) and sociocultural factors (n=3). CONCLUSIONS The largest threats to the popularity of mHealth initiatives are the absence of government policy, lack of government interest, heavy dependence on foreign funding, and lack of technological infrastructure. Finally, while current mHealth initiatives have already demonstrated promising opportunities for alternative models of funding, such as social entrepreneurship or private business models, sustainable mHealth initiatives outside of those funded by external donors have not yet been undertaken.


Author(s):  
Cristina Trocin ◽  
Enrica Croda

Mobile health initiatives aim to give patients more medical information and to empower them over their medical treatments. However, information overload and lack of digital literacy may hinder patient empowerment. This chapter investigates opportunities and challenges of patient empowerment and mobile health. The authors analyze the different definitions used in the literature to characterize patient empowerment and mobile health, discussing implications for all the care actors involved. Although the adoption rate of mobile technologies is at its infant stage and challenges still outweigh the benefits of patient empowerment, mobile health apps can foster the progress towards patient-centered care.


2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 1190-1191
Author(s):  
G.R. Desai ◽  
S. Singh ◽  
P. Chatterjee ◽  
A.B. Dey

Author(s):  
Donald Flywell Malanga

Malawi has been implementing mobile health (mHealth) model for close to five years. This was aimed to address the challenges of access to accurate, timely information and healthcare services to the people and bridge the gap of health service delivery disparities that currently exist in the country. This chapter reviews the mHealth initiatives being implemented in the country by drawing two case studies into context: Chipatala Cha Pa Foni (CCPF) Project for improving Maternal, New born, and Child Health (MNCH) and Rapid SMS Project for improving the Child Nutrition Surveillance. The chapter also examines the success stories registered in the implementation of the projects; and identifies the challenges that hampered the adoption and scalability of the mHealth projects. Based on the challenges, the chapter makes recommendation that Malawi and other developing countries may adopt for scaling up or replicating similar mHealth programmes. The chapter is based on literature review and the author's points of view.


Author(s):  
Cristina Trocin ◽  
Enrica Croda

Mobile health initiatives aim to give patients more medical information and to empower them over their medical treatments. However, information overload and lack of digital literacy may hinder patient empowerment. This chapter investigates opportunities and challenges of patient empowerment and mobile health. The authors analyze the different definitions used in the literature to characterize patient empowerment and mobile health, discussing implications for all the care actors involved. Although the adoption rate of mobile technologies is at its infant stage and challenges still outweigh the benefits of patient empowerment, mobile health apps can foster the progress towards patient-centered care.


Author(s):  
Donald Flywell Malanga ◽  
Wallace Chigona

Mobile health (mHealth) has emerged as a tool to enhance efficiency of healthcare service delivery in developing countries especially in hard-to-reach areas. The purpose of this article was to review the mHealth initiatives implemented in Malawi as a developing country, since 2010-2017 and their impact on health outcomes. Data was gathered through published reports, peer-reviewed papers, grey-literature on electronic health (eHealth), telemedicine and mHealth. The findings reveal that although the majority of mHealth projects have registered positive impacts, implementation challenges still exist. The study also revealed that the majority of mHealth projects are driven and funded by Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO) and have not moved beyond pilot phase. There is also lack of funding model on part of the Malawi Government to scale-up the mHealth programmes. Based on the challenges, the article makes some recommendations.


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