Title
Designing and Evaluating mHealth Interventions for Vulnerable Populations: A Systematic Review
Abstract
ABSTRACTDiverse disciplines, including Human-Computer Interaction have explored how mobile health (mHealth) applications can transform healthcare and health promotion. Increasingly, research has explored how mHealth tools can promote healthy behaviors within vulnerable populations-groups that disproportionately experience barriers to wellness. We conducted a systematic review of 83 papers from diverse disciplines to characterize the design and impact of mHealth tools in low-socioeconomic (low-SES) and racial/ethnic minority individuals. Our findings highlight that the diversity within low-SES and racial/ethnic minority groups was not reflected in the populations studied. Most studies focused on improving the health of individuals, often neglecting factors at the community and society levels that influence health disparities. Moreover, few improvements in health outcomes were demonstrated. We further discuss factors that acted as barriers and facilitators of mHealth intervention adoption. Our findings highlight trends that can drive critically needed digital health innovations for vulnerable populations.
Year
DOI
Venue
2018
10.1145/3173574.3173589
Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Keywords
Field
DocType
Systematic Review, Vulnerable Populations, Race, Ethnicity, Socioeconomic Status, mHealth, Minority
Health care,Psychological intervention,Gerontology,Computer science,Digital health,mHealth,Health equity,Ethnic group,Multimedia,Health promotion,Socioeconomic status
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
3
0.47
28
Authors
7