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Community Health Workers and Mobile Technology: A Systematic Review of the Literature

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, June 2013
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Title
Community Health Workers and Mobile Technology: A Systematic Review of the Literature
Published in
PLOS ONE, June 2013
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0065772
Pubmed ID
Authors

Rebecca Braun, Caricia Catalani, Julian Wimbush, Dennis Israelski

Abstract

In low-resource settings, community health workers are frontline providers who shoulder the health service delivery burden. Increasingly, mobile technologies are developed, tested, and deployed with community health workers to facilitate tasks and improve outcomes. We reviewed the evidence for the use of mobile technology by community health workers to identify opportunities and challenges for strengthening health systems in resource-constrained settings. We conducted a systematic review of peer-reviewed literature from health, medical, social science, and engineering databases, using PRISMA guidelines. We identified a total of 25 unique full-text research articles on community health workers and their use of mobile technology for the delivery of health services. Community health workers have used mobile tools to advance a broad range of health aims throughout the globe, particularly maternal and child health, HIV/AIDS, and sexual and reproductive health. Most commonly, community health workers use mobile technology to collect field-based health data, receive alerts and reminders, facilitate health education sessions, and conduct person-to-person communication. Programmatic efforts to strengthen health service delivery focus on improving adherence to standards and guidelines, community education and training, and programmatic leadership and management practices. Those studies that evaluated program outcomes provided some evidence that mobile tools help community health workers to improve the quality of care provided, efficiency of services, and capacity for program monitoring. Evidence suggests mobile technology presents promising opportunities to improve the range and quality of services provided by community health workers. Small-scale efforts, pilot projects, and preliminary descriptive studies are increasing, and there is a trend toward using feasible and acceptable interventions that lead to positive program outcomes through operational improvements and rigorous study designs. Programmatic and scientific gaps will need to be addressed by global leaders as they advance the use and assessment of mobile technology tools for community health workers.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 6 <1%
United Kingdom 5 <1%
Netherlands 3 <1%
South Africa 2 <1%
Switzerland 2 <1%
Tanzania, United Republic of 2 <1%
Australia 1 <1%
Indonesia 1 <1%
Israel 1 <1%
Other 2 <1%
Unknown 900 97%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Master 215 23%
Researcher 123 13%
Student > Ph. D. Student 105 11%
Student > Postgraduate 65 7%
Student > Doctoral Student 63 7%
Other 194 21%
Unknown 160 17%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Medicine and Dentistry 218 24%
Social Sciences 126 14%
Nursing and Health Professions 100 11%
Computer Science 88 10%
Business, Management and Accounting 33 4%
Other 160 17%
Unknown 200 22%