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Journal ArticleDOI

Special delivery: an analysis of mHealth in maternal and newborn health programs and their outcomes around the world.

Tigest Tamrat, +1 more
- 01 Jul 2012 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 5, pp 1092-1101
TLDR
The integration of mobile health for prenatal and newborn health services has demonstrated positive outcomes, but the sustainability and scalability of operations requires further feedback from and evaluation of ongoing programs.
Abstract
Mobile health (mHealth) encompasses the use of mobile telecommunication and multimedia into increasingly mobile and wireless health care delivery systems and has the potential to improve tens of thousands of lives each year. The ubiquity and penetration of mobile phones presents the opportunity to leverage mHealth for maternal and newborn care, particularly in under-resourced health ecosystems. Moreover, the slow progress and funding constraints in attaining the Millennium Development Goals for child and maternal health encourage harnessing innovative measures, such as mHealth, to address these public health priorities. This literature review provides a schematic overview of the outcomes, barriers, and strategies of integrating mHealth to improve prenatal and neonatal health outcomes. Six electronic databases were methodically searched using predetermined search terms. Retrieved articles were then categorized according to themes identified in previous studies. A total of 34 articles and reports contributed to the findings with information about the use and limitations of mHealth for prenatal and neonatal healthcare access and delivery. Health systems have implemented mHealth programs to facilitate emergency medical responses, point-of-care support, health promotion and data collection. However, the policy infrastructure for funding, coordinating and guiding the sustainable adoption of prenatal and neonatal mHealth services remains under-developed. The integration of mobile health for prenatal and newborn health services has demonstrated positive outcomes, but the sustainability and scalability of operations requires further feedback from and evaluation of ongoing programs.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

mHealth innovations as health system strengthening tools: 12 common applications and a visual framework

TL;DR: This new framework lays out 12 common mHealth applications used as health systems strengthening innovations across the reproductive health continuum and describes how these applications can be applied in the context of a women's health care system.
Journal ArticleDOI

mHealth Adoption in Low-Resource Environments: A Review of the Use of Mobile Healthcare in Developing Countries

TL;DR: A stage-based approach is adopted to understand the varied contributions to mHealth research and the heuristic of inputs-mechanism-outputs is proposed as a tool to categorize mHealth studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effectiveness of mHealth interventions for maternal, newborn and child health in low- and middle-income countries: Systematic review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: Most studies of mHealth for MNCH in LMIC are of poor methodological quality and few have evaluated impacts on patient outcomes and there is modest evidence that interventions delivered via SMS messaging can improve infant feeding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Signal quality indices and data fusion for determining clinical acceptability of electrocardiograms

TL;DR: A completely automated algorithm to detect poor-quality electrocardiograms (ECGs) is described, based on both novel and previously published signal quality metrics, originally designed for intensive care monitoring and expected to achieve an accuracy closer to 100%.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Guest Editorial Introduction to the Special Section on M-Health: Beyond Seamless Mobility and Global Wireless Health-Care Connectivity

TL;DR: This editorial paper presents a snapshot of recent developments in wireless communications integrated with developments in pervasive and wearable technologies and addresses some of the challenges and future implementation issues from the m-Health perspective.

Barriers and Gaps Affecting mHealth in Low and Middle Income Countries: Policy White Paper

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined and synthesized the existing mHealth literature to assess the current state of mHealth knowledge and identify barriers and gaps, and the mHealth Alliance commissioned an in-depth exploration of the policy barriers and research gaps facing mHealth.

Improving health connecting people: the role of ICTs in the health sector of developing countries.

TL;DR: The paper describes the major constraints and challenges faced in using ICTs effectively in the health sector of developing countries.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Case for mHealth in Developing Countries

TL;DR: As mobile phones and other mobile devices become part of everyday life, people become better equipped to respond to emergencies, consult with peers and health professionals about health issues as they arise, and access health services that are increasingly being delivered through mobile phone based systems, such as remote patient monitoring.
Journal ArticleDOI

mHealth - an Ultimate Platform to Serve the Unserved

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized major current developments and research in the field of mobile health (mHealth) services, and reported on the unique characteristics of mHealth platform and its role in delivering health services to the resource poor settings.
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