Literature DB >> 27592821

Travel medicine and mHealth technology: a study using smartphones to collect health data during travel.

Andrea Farnham1, Ulf Blanke2, Emily Stone3, Milo A Puhan3, Christoph Hatz4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: mHealth methodology such as smartphone applications offers new opportunities to capture the full range of health risks during travel in real time. Our study aims to widen the scope of travel health research in tropical and subtropical destinations by using a smartphone application to collect detailed information on health behaviours, clinical symptoms, accidents and environmental factors during travel.
METHODS: We enrolled travel clinic clients in Zurich and Basel ≥18 years of age travelling to Thailand for <5 weeks. Sociodemographic, clinical and risk behaviour information was collected pre-travel. Participants were equipped with a smartphone and an application that (1) actively administers a daily self-report questionnaire on the health risks, behaviours and symptoms the traveller encountered, and (2) passively collects information on the traveller's location and environmental conditions by transformation of raw GPS data.
RESULTS: A prospective cohort of 101 travellers planning travel to Thailand between January and June 2015 was recruited. Of the 101 enrolled travellers, 75 (74.3%) answered at least one questionnaire during travel, 10 (9.9%) had technical difficulties and 16 (15.8%) dropped out. Those who completed questionnaires were a median of 27.0 years old (range 18-57). Travellers filled out a median of 12.0 questionnaires during their trip (range 1-30), corresponding to a median completion rate of 85.0% days of travel. The typical example of a healthy female traveller shows that many and diverse health issues arise during a trip that clusters on certain days. The rich data on behaviour and local environment may be used to explain the occurrence and clustering of health issues.
CONCLUSIONS: Use of a smartphone app to collect health information is technically feasible and acceptable amongst a traveller population, minimizes recall bias and greatly increases the quality and quantity of data collected during travel. mHealth technology shows great potential for innovation in travel medicine. © International Society of Travel Medicine, 2016. All rights reserved. Published by Oxford University Press. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  : Travel medicine; Switzerland; Thailand; epidemiology; mHealth; travel statistics

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27592821     DOI: 10.1093/jtm/taw056

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Travel Med        ISSN: 1195-1982            Impact factor:   8.490


  6 in total

1.  Patients with Chronic Diseases Who Travel: Need for Global Access to Timely Health Care Data.

Authors:  Henrik Toft Sørensen
Journal:  Clin Epidemiol       Date:  2022-04-26       Impact factor: 5.814

Review 2.  Measuring mobility, disease connectivity and individual risk: a review of using mobile phone data and mHealth for travel medicine.

Authors:  Shengjie Lai; Andrea Farnham; Nick W Ruktanonchai; Andrew J Tatem
Journal:  J Travel Med       Date:  2019-05-10       Impact factor: 8.490

3.  Evaluation of a web-based self-reporting method for monitoring international passengers returning from an area of emerging infection.

Authors:  B Lefèvre; T Blanchon; P Saint-Martin; P Tattevin; D Che; E Caumes; T Pitel; L Rossignol; N Dournon; X Duval; B Hoen
Journal:  Infect Dis Now       Date:  2020-06-18

4.  Predicting morbidity in older travellers during a short-term stay in the tropics: the ELDEST study.

Authors:  Jessica A Vlot; Marissa G D Vive; Henricus J Brockhoff; Pieter J J van Genderen; Marie-Christine E Trompenaars; James E van Steenbergen; Leonardus G Visser
Journal:  J Travel Med       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 8.490

Review 5.  Healthy, safe and responsible: the modern female traveller.

Authors:  Irmgard L Bauer
Journal:  Trop Dis Travel Med Vaccines       Date:  2021-06-05

6.  The COVID-19 pandemic offers a key moment to reflect on travel medicine practice.

Authors:  Christoph Hatz; Silja Bühler; Andrea Farnham
Journal:  J Travel Med       Date:  2020-12-23       Impact factor: 8.490

  6 in total

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