A larger selection of phone applications, or apps, is needed to improve the tremendous resources that have been provided to improve HIV/AIDS prevention, care and treatment.

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The current use of mobile phones and tablets in HIV-related care in low- and middle-income countries around the world was evaluated in a new study. The findings of the study are published in September issue of Current HIV/AIDS Reports.
Nurses provide care but also collect data. If they can be actively engaged in using that data, it can lead to improvements in data quality and, ultimately, better health outcomes, Gimbel said. The use of this new technology in the health care system is also known as "mHealth."
The authors found that a larger selection of phone applications, or apps, is needed to improve the tremendous resources that have been provided to improve HIV/AIDS prevention, care and treatment. And the applications must be designed to be used by huge volumes of users, in other words, to scale.
"Scientists, researchers and practitioners increasingly are borrowing tools from engineering and bringing them to the intersection of quality improvement and health," Gimbel said.
Leveraging existing health resources - including smartphones - will help nurses work better and smarter, Gimbel said. Nearly 100 percent of the world's population lives within reach of a cellphone signal, and many nurses in developing economies are able to afford a smartphone. Smartphones can run apps to collect and transmit data of all kinds, from patient adherence information to monitoring drug protocols, and more.
Now, Gimbel argues, academics and industry must work collaboratively to develop scalable solutions for mHealth innovations to combat HIV and other diseases.
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