In: Nursing
Write a 3-5 page paper on Mobile Health
Mobile health ,or mHealth, is a rapidly developing factor in
health care today, promising to make health care better and more
efficient. According to a recent survey, 83 percent of physicians
in the U.S. already use mobile health technology or mHealth to
provide patient care.1
Because this is such a new and changing field, there is no set
definition for mobile health technology or mHealth. The World
Health Organization says we can think of it as “medical and public
health practice supported by mobile devices.” In other words,
mobile health technology is the use of smartphones, tablets and
other mobile devices to deliver health care and preventive health
services.
But, beyond formal definitions and theory, where does mHealth come into practice? Health care providers use mobile health technology to:
Access clinical information (e.g., through mobile health apps
and mobile-enabled EHRs),
Collaborate with care teams (e.g., with secure text
messaging),
Communicate with patients (e.g., through patient portals),
Offer real-time monitoring of patients, and
Provide health care remotely, also called telemedicine.
Patients use mobile health technology to:
Track their own health data through mHealth apps and devices
like the Fitbit
Access their clinical records through mobile-enabled patient
portals, and
Communicate with their providers (e.g., through HIPAA compliant
e-mail and secure text messaging).
Mobile health technology is also an important tool in improving
the health of patients in underdeveloped nations. In 2011, 70% of
the world’s five billion mobile wireless subscribers were in low-
or middle-income countries. Mobile health technology allows
government health officials to extend their reach into rural or
impoverished areas. In fact, 83% of the 112 member states of the
World Health Organization have at least one mHealth initiative in
their country
Despite the promise and widespread use of mobile health technology,
health care leaders need solutions for a number of unique
challenges. These challenges include protecting the privacy of
patient information shared on mobile devices, ensuring the
interoperability of mobile health technology with EHRs and other
health technology, and determining which mHealth apps are safest
and most effective