Mobile Health Interventions to Improve Health Behaviors and Healthcare Services among Vietnamese Individuals: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Sources and Study Selection
2.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Data Extraction and Data Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Study Characteristics and Quality
Author (Year) | Study Design (Participants) | Device—mHealth Intervention | Study Outcomes | Findings | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Feasibility | Acceptability | Efficacy | ||||
McBride, B. et al. (2018) [8] | Qualitative—document review; observations; focus group discussions; in-depth interviews (n = 60) | Mobile phone— SMS | Improve access to maternal, newborn, and child health services and health equity utilizing mHealth intervention. | Not measured. | Participants reported satisfaction with SMS and willingness to pay a fee for service. | Increased knowledge, effective behavior change, communication, husband involvement, and strengthened relationships between participants and community health workers. |
Vu, L. T. H. et al. (2016) [9] | Prospective cohort (mixed methods) (n = 411 for baseline survey; n = 482 for post-intervention survey) | Telephone— Hotline, SMS, and map of health services providers | Impact of the 12-month mHealth intervention on changes in knowledge and practices related to sexual and reproductive health among female migrants. | Ability to recruit and retain 411 participants with various backgrounds and demographics. | Participants rated SMS service as useful (64.9%, n = 288) and very useful (20.3%, n = 90). | Women’s knowledge of sexual and reproductive health increased by 70.3%, and sexual and reproductive health practices were improved by 85.5%. |
Nguyen, N. T. et al. (2017) [10] | Prospective cohort (pre- and post- uncontrolled study) (n = 11,449) | Mobile phone— SMS | Impact of SMS reminders to improve the immunization program by increasing vaccination rate. | SMS reminders have been shown to improve immunization coverage and timeliness of vaccination. | 93.3% (111/120) of interviewees were willing to pay for SMS reminders for immunization schedule. | Immunization rate of children under one year old increased significantly from 75.4% in 2013 to 81.7% in 2014 and to 99.2% in 2015. |
Ngo, C. Q. et al. (2019) [11] | Randomized, cross-sectional study (n = 469) | Telephone—SMS, phone calls/counseling | Impact of national telephone counselling for smoking cessation (self-report quit rate at baseline, 7-day, and 6-month abstinence) and factors associated with the Quitline use. | Response rate of 28.4% (469/1648) after excluding callers who did not set counseling appointments. | 88.5% of participants were satisfied with program. Satisfaction and engagement were factors associated with increased Quitline use. | Most participants felt more confident about quitting (74.3%) and took early action via their first quit attempt (81.7%); 18.3% reported more than 7-day abstinence period. |
Jiang, N. et al. (2021) [12] | RCT (2 arms) (n = 100) | Mobile phone— SMS | Feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of a fully automated bidirectional SMS smoking cessation 6-week intervention. | Recruitment rate of 99% (100/101) enrolled in program and completed 12-week follow-up survey. In-depth interviews were also conducted to evaluate feasibility. | 98% of participants in the intervention arm reported being satisfied with the program versus 82% in the control arm. | Biochemically verified abstinence was higher in the intervention arm at 6 weeks (20% vs. 2%), but the effect was not significant at 12 weeks (12% vs. 6%). |
Nguyen, T.A. et al. (2017) [13] | Prospective cohort (uncontrolled feasibility study) (n = 40) | Smartphone—SMS, participants record themselves taking treatment and upload video to online server | Feasibility of using asynchronous Video Directly Observed Therapy (VDOT) to support treatment adherence among patients with pulmonary tuberculosis for 12 months. | 51% (40/78) participated and rated the VDOT as feasible and interface highly, despite facing some initial technical difficulties. | 87.5% (n = 35) found that VDOT was easy to use and stated they would recommend this service to others. | 71.1% (n = 27) of participants took all required doses. A median of 88.4% of doses were correctly recorded and uploaded. 85% (n = 34) of participants missed <4 video uploads during the follow-up period. |
Tran, B. X. & Houston, S. (2012) [14] | Cross-sectional survey (n = 1016) | Mobile phone— SMS, direct phone calls, and automatic voice calls | Feasibility of using mobile phone to support antiretroviral treatment adherence for patients with HIV/AIDS. | Expressed preferences for SMS (41.8%), direct calls (35.4%), direct counseling (43.1%), automated pill taking reminders (29.1%), regular information messages (21.3%), and clinic visits booking (16.5%). | 63.5% of participants were willing to use services and willing to pay a fee for SMS adherence support service. | Majority of participants (78.6%) considered using mobile phone could be an effective adherence support. |
Imamura, K. et al. (2021) [15] | Randomized controlled trial (RCT) (3 arms) (n = 951) | Smartphone—Smartphone application | Effect of a 10-week smartphone-based internet cognitive behavioral therapy stress management program to improve depression and anxiety among nurses. | Recruitment rate of 75.8% (962/1269) participated in baseline survey; 90% completed 7-month follow up for all 3 groups. | Completion rates (84%), satisfaction (>82%), and usefulness (>80%) in both intervention groups. | Depression and anxiety average scores decreased at 3 months from baseline but increased again at 7 months from baseline in both intervention groups. |
Huang, W.-C. et al. (2022) [16] | Prospective cohort (uncontrolled feasibility single-arm study) (n = 221) | Mobile phone— Telephone calls, short message service (SMS) | Feasibility of a 12-month smoking cessation intervention that integrates follow-up counseling phone calls and scheduled text messages with brief advice from physicians. | Of 431 who were eligible, 221 (51.3%) agreed to participate in program. | 141 (63.8%) participated in all 4 phone calls; 117 (52.9%) participated in all 8 phone calls in first 30 days. | 90 (40.7%) self-reported abstinence from smoking in previous 30 days. Overall, 5.9% of all participants achieved verified smoking cessation for more than 30 days 12 months after enrollment. |
Tran, B. X. et al. (2018) [17] | Cross-sectional study (n = 429) | Smartphone— application for vaccination management | Efficacy, adoption, and feasibility of implementing an mHealth application to educate and deliver information about vaccination and immunization. | Ability to recruit 429 participants with different levels of socio-demographic background. | Participants reported willingness to use (90.1%) and willingness to pay for the app 79.1%). | 69.6% of participants believed that the app was necessary. Those who thought the app was unnecessary also felt there was sufficient vaccination information available online. |
Khanh, T. Q. et al. (2020) [18] | Prospective cohort (uncontrolled pilot single-arm study) (n = 279) | Smartphone— Mobile app, SMS | Improve glycemic control and user satisfaction of incorporating a 12-week digital diabetes care system that monitor patient data and adjust therapy through digital contact. | Recruitment rate of 93% (279/300) participation. At week 12 and during the 20-day follow-up period, 81% remained engaged with the system and maintained glucose monitoring. | Both patients and healthcare professionals completed questionnaires at the final visit and reported overall satisfaction with system. | 79% of participants had decreased average glucose levels, 36.9% of participants had decreased fasting glucose in first 2 weeks and last 2 weeks, and 45% of participants had HbA1c decreased from baseline at 12-week follow up. |
Nguyet, T.T. et al. (2021) [19] | Quasi-experimental with a nonequivalent control group design (n = 52) | Smartphone, tablet, personal computers—SMS, viewings of educational content | Effect of a 4-week newborn care education program on breastfeeding rate and maternal role confidence of first-time mothers. | 69% (70/101) agreed to participate with an attrition rate of 72% in the control group and 78% in the experimental group. | Not measured | At 4 weeks postpartum, the experimental group showed a significantly higher level of breastfeeding rate (p < 0.05) and mean maternal role confidence (p < 0.05) than the control group. |
Ngoc, N. T. N. et al. (2014) [20] | RCT (n = 1433) | Telephone— Phone follow-up calls | Feasibility, acceptability, and efficacy of a service delivery protocol that replaces the routine clinic visit after medical abortion. | Phone follow-up offers a feasible approach to review pregnancy test result and checklist responses with the participants. | Most participants (88.3% [606/686]) indicated preference to have phone call follow-up from a healthcare provider. | Phone call follow-ups enable 85% of women to avoid a routine clinic visit without any decrease in safety. |
Shapiro, L. M. et al. (2021) [21] | Prospective cluster (uncontrolled feasibility pilot study) (n = 8) | Mobile phone— SMS reminders and follow-up data collection | Feasibility of a 12-week SMS follow-up to obtain patient-reported outcome measures after hand surgery. | 100% (8/8) were eligible and agreed to participate with 100% attrition. | Majority (>75%) of patients completed follow-up questionnaires at all data collection points. | SMS may serve as an effective method for follow-up to ensure safety and quality healthcare in low-resource settings. |
3.2. Feasibility of mHealth Interventions
3.3. Acceptability of mHealth Interventions
3.4. Efficacy of mHealth Interventions
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Confounding Bias | Selection Bias | Intervention Classification Bias | Deviation in Intervention Bias | Missing Data Bias | Measurement Bias | Selection of Reported Results Bias | Overall Rating | ||
Nguyen, N.T. et al. (2017) [10] | Green = Low risk of bias Orange = Moderate risk Red = Serious risk Blue = Critical risk Gray = No information | ||||||||
Ngo, C.Q. et al. (2019) [11] | |||||||||
Nguyen, T.A. et al. (2017) [13] | |||||||||
Tran, B.X. & Houston, S. (2012) [14] | |||||||||
Huang, W-C. et al. (2022) [16] | |||||||||
Tran, B.X. et al. (2018) [17] | |||||||||
Khanh, T.Q. et al. (2020) [18] | |||||||||
Nguyet, T.T. et al. (2021) [19] | |||||||||
Shapiro, L.M. et al. (2021) [21] |
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Nguyen, A.; Eschiti, V.; Bui, T.C.; Nagykaldi, Z.; Dwyer, K. Mobile Health Interventions to Improve Health Behaviors and Healthcare Services among Vietnamese Individuals: A Systematic Review. Healthcare 2023, 11, 1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11091225
Nguyen A, Eschiti V, Bui TC, Nagykaldi Z, Dwyer K. Mobile Health Interventions to Improve Health Behaviors and Healthcare Services among Vietnamese Individuals: A Systematic Review. Healthcare. 2023; 11(9):1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11091225
Chicago/Turabian StyleNguyen, Anna, Valerie Eschiti, Thanh C. Bui, Zsolt Nagykaldi, and Kathleen Dwyer. 2023. "Mobile Health Interventions to Improve Health Behaviors and Healthcare Services among Vietnamese Individuals: A Systematic Review" Healthcare 11, no. 9: 1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11091225
APA StyleNguyen, A., Eschiti, V., Bui, T. C., Nagykaldi, Z., & Dwyer, K. (2023). Mobile Health Interventions to Improve Health Behaviors and Healthcare Services among Vietnamese Individuals: A Systematic Review. Healthcare, 11(9), 1225. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11091225