A Select Study of Mobile Health Applications in Indian Context
Date
2020
Authors
Pai, Rajesh R.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Mobile health (mHealth) is an essential requirement in healthcare for improving health
service delivery. Despite its increasing attention across different countries, there is a
dearth of evidence about its usefulness among Indian populations. The literature
considers mHealth as “the use of transportation systems such as mobile medical units
or vans and/or mobile phone/ICT for providing health service to the people living in a
particular locality”. The study aims to answer the research question “how to improve
the usefulness of mobile health applications for health service delivery?” by i)
analyzing the accessibility and acceptance of mobile health among the rural population;
ii) studying affordability in terms of cost to consumer and financial viability of the
service provider; and by iii) identifying the awareness level in the use of mobile health
applications among the citizens. A convergent mixed method design has been carried
out to address the research objectives.
A qualitative interview was used to measure the accessibility and acceptance of
mHealth among rural regions. The study identified a lack of awareness about the term
and government-initiated applications among people and doctors though it has been
used for vaccination remainders and cessation programmes. The programmes and
applications are available at places where network and its supporting technologies are
connected to scheduling vaccinations and conducting regular interventions. The
consolidation of interview findings proposed an acceptance model pertaining to rural
Indian populations. The affordability of mHealth is measured by conducting interviews
among technology entrepreneurs and software developers. Findings illustrated that
people’s need and unwillingness, lack of application infrastructure, ecosystem
development, governmental policies, and training and support influences mHealth
systems implementations. As Twitter in health research is a growing body of work, the
study extracts its messages and performs sentiment analysis to analyze emotions and
themes surrounding mHealth applications, social media games, social media
movement, and mental health.
A quantitative survey approach is adopted to study the awareness level in the use of the
mobile phone for health communication and delivery, and self-managing health
applications among the technical and working staffs and medical and healthprofessionals. The study also tested the relationships between the individual
characteristics, adoption characteristics of new product or service, individual cognitive
factors, and health-related use behavior. The results showed that personal
innovativeness, awareness, and perceived usefulness tends to explain better intention
to use than they do individually.
A triangulation of studies explains that the dynamics associated with mHealth
applications in the real environment are somewhat disorganized and formed a vicious
cycle. This resulted in a sense of dissatisfaction among the people, healthcare
practitioners, government, and the techno-entrepreneurs. The need for a sensitization
programme, the right policy and the governance framework for mHealth applications
would contribute to the nation’s health policy objective. Thus, recommendations from
healthcare professionals influence users and patients in improving awareness that
subsequently improves the intention to use and acceptance for health service delivery.
This thesis contributes by integrating multiple theoretical models and methods, i.e.,
qualitative and quantitative, towards the development of mobile health framework for
investigating a research question. Compared to earlier studies, this study examines the
relationships across the layers of people, process, and technology for achieving the
research question. Future research can consider mHealth accessibility in-terms of the
digital divide and medical divide, and the influence of trust, technology anxiety,
environmental concerns, health severity, health susceptibility, and behavioral control
on awareness and intention to use can be studied.
Description
Keywords
School of Management