Features and characteristics of publicly available mHealth apps for self-management in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Author:

Quach Shirley12ORCID,Benoit Adam2,Oliveira Ana123,Packham Tara L.1ORCID,Goldstein Roger24,Brooks Dina12

Affiliation:

1. School of Rehabilitation Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada

2. Respiratory Research, West Park Healthcare center, Toronto, Canada

3. Lab3R – Respiratory Research and Rehabilitation Laboratory, University of Aveiro (ESSUA), Aveiro, Portugal

4. Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

Abstract

Mobile health applications (mHealth apps) may be able to support people living with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) to develop the appropriate skills and routines for adequate self-management. Given the wide variety of publicly available mHealth apps, it is important to be aware of their characteristics to optimize their use and mitigate potential harms.ObjectiveTo report the characteristics and features of publicly available apps for COPD self-management.MethodsMHealth apps designed for patients’ COPD self-management were searched in the Google Play and Apple app stores. Two reviewers trialed and assessed the eligible apps using the MHealth Index and Navigation Database framework to describe the characteristics, qualities, and features of mHealth apps across five domains.ResultsFrom the Google Play and Apple stores, thirteen apps were identified and eligible for further evaluation. All thirteen apps were available for Android devices, but only seven were available for Apple devices. Most apps were developed by for-profit organizations (8/13), non-profit organizations (2/13), and unknown developers (3/13). Many apps had privacy policies (9/13), but only three apps described their security systems and two mentioned compliance with local health information and data usage laws. Education was the common app feature; additional features were medication reminders, symptom tracking, journaling, and action planning. None provided clinical evidence to support their use.ConclusionsPublicly available COPD apps vary in their designs, features, and overall quality. These apps lack evidence to support their clinical use and cannot be recommended at this time.

Funder

Canadian Lung Association

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Information Management,Computer Science Applications,Health Informatics,Health Policy

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