Literature DB >> 26377525

Baseline Evaluation of a Participatory Mobile Health Intervention for Dengue Prevention in Sri Lanka.

May O Lwin1, Santosh Vijaykumar2, Gentatsu Lim1, Owen Noel Newton Fernando1, Vajira Sampath Rathnayake1, Schubert Foo1.   

Abstract

Challenges posed by infectious disease outbreaks have led to a range of participatory mobile phone-based innovations that use the power of crowdsourcing for disease surveillance. However, the dynamics of participatory behavior by crowds in such interventions have yet to be examined. This article reports results from a baseline evaluation of one such intervention called Mo-Buzz, a mobile-based crowdsource-driven socially mediated system developed to address gaps in dengue surveillance and education in Colombo, Sri Lanka. We conducted a 30-minute cross-sectional field survey (N = 404) among potential users of Mo-Buzz in Colombo. We examined individual, institutional, and cultural factors that influence their potential intention-to-use Mo-Buzz and assessed if these factors varied by demographic factors. Descriptive analysis revealed high perceived ease-of-use (PEOU; M = 3.81, SD = 0.44), perceived usefulness (PU; M = 4.01, SD = 0.48), and intention-to-use (PI; M = 3.91, SD = 0.46) among participants. Analysis of variance suggested participants in the 31 to 40 years age group reported highest PEOU, whereas the oldest group reported high perceived institutional efficacy (M = 3.59, SD = 0.64) and collectivistic tendencies. Significant differences (at the p < .05 level) were also found by education and income. Regression analysis demonstrated that PU, behavioral control, institutional efficacy, and collectivism were significant predictors of PI. We concluded that despite high overall PI, future adoption and use of Mo-Buzz will be shaped by a complex mix of factors at different levels of the public health ecology. Implications of study findings from theoretical and practical perspectives related to the future adoption of mobile-based participatory systems in public health are discussed and ideas for a future research agenda presented.
© 2015 Society for Public Health Education.

Entities:  

Keywords:  global health; health behavior; health communications; new media and social media interventions; public and consumer health informatics; social media

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26377525     DOI: 10.1177/1090198115604623

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Educ Behav        ISSN: 1090-1981


  2 in total

Review 1.  The potential use of social media and other internet-related data and communications for child maltreatment surveillance and epidemiological research: Scoping review and recommendations.

Authors:  Laura M Schwab-Reese; Wendy Hovdestad; Lil Tonmyr; John Fluke
Journal:  Child Abuse Negl       Date:  2018-02-01

2.  Lessons From the Implementation of Mo-Buzz, a Mobile Pandemic Surveillance System for Dengue.

Authors:  May Oo Lwin; Karthikayen Jayasundar; Anita Sheldenkar; Ruwan Wijayamuni; Prasad Wimalaratne; Kacey C Ernst; Schubert Foo
Journal:  JMIR Public Health Surveill       Date:  2017-10-02
  2 in total

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