Background: The use of technology to support healthcare in Indonesia holds new promise in light of decreasing costs of owning mobile devices and ease of access to internet. However, it is necessary to assess end-user perceptions regarding mobile health interventions prior to its implementation. This would throw light on the acceptability of mobile phone communication in bringing about behavioural changes among the target Indonesian population. The aim of this study was to explore the perceived usefulness of receiving a potential smoking cessation intervention via mobile phones. Methods: This is an exploratory cross-sectional study involving current and former adult tobacco smokers residing in Indonesia. Online advertisement and snowballing were used to recruit respondents. Data was collected using a web-based survey over a period of 4 weeks. Those willing to participate signed an online consent and were subsequently directed to the online questionnaire that obtained demographics, tobacco usage patterns, perceived usefulness of a mobile phone smoking cessation application and its design. Results: A total of 161 people who smoked tobacco responded to the online survey. The mean age of the participants was 29.4. Of the 123 respondents, 102 were men. Prior experience with using a mobile phone for health communication (OR 3.6, P=0.014) and those willing to quit smoking (OR 5.1, P=0.043) were likely to perceive a mobile phone smoking cessation intervention as useful. A smartphone application was preferred over text messages, media messages or interactive voice response technology. Content comprising of motivational messages highlighting the methods and benefits of quitting smoking were requested. Conclusion: People who smoke in Indonesia perceived receiving a potential smoking cessation intervention via mobile phones as useful. A multi-component, personalized smartphone application was the desired intervention technique. Such an intervention developed and implemented within a public health program could help address the tobacco epidemic in Indonesia.
West Papua is the second biggest province in eastern part of Indonesia. Availability and accessibility of health care services are among the priority problems in this province. Telemedicine Indonesia (TEMENIN), a telemedicine pilot project from the Ministry of Health, has been implemented in 4 health care facilities in West Papua since 2018. This paper aims to evaluate the implementation and challenges of TEMENIN in respected health facilities in West Papua province. We applied a descriptive study using qualitative and quantitative approaches. Focus group discussion and interviews with participants emphasized the high demands of well running telemedicine. However, several difficulties and challenges have contributed to the low utilization of the TEMENIN during the pilot project. Those include unstable Internet connection, limited ease of use and lack of suitable features that meet local health problems. Several recommendations are suggested to increase the utilization and improve the pilot project in the coming years.
Background: The use of technology to support healthcare in Indonesia holds new promise in light of decreasing costs of owning mobile devices and ease of access to internet. However, it is necessary to assess end-user perceptions regarding mobile health interventions prior to its implementation. This would throw light on the acceptability of mobile phone communication in bringing about behavioral changes among the target Indonesian population. The aim of this study was to explore the perceived usefulness of receiving a potential smoking cessation intervention via mobile phones. Methods: This is an exploratory cross-sectional study involving current and former adult tobacco smokers residing in Indonesia. Online advertisement and snowballing were used to recruit respondents. Data was collected using a web-based survey over a period of 4 weeks. Those willing to participate signed an online consent and were subsequently directed to the online questionnaire that obtained demographics, tobacco usage patterns, perceived usefulness of a mobile phone smoking cessation application and its design. Results: A total of 161 people who smoked tobacco responded to the online survey. The mean age of the participants was 29.4. Of the 123 respondents, 102 were men. Prior experience with using a mobile phone for health communication (OR 3.6, P=0.014) and those willing to quit smoking (OR 5.1, P=0.043) were likely to perceive a mobile phone smoking cessation intervention as useful. A smartphone application was preferred over text messages, media messages or interactive voice response technology. Content consisting of motivational messages highlighting the methods and benefits of quitting smoking were requested. Conclusion: People who smoke in Indonesia perceived receiving a potential smoking cessation intervention via mobile phones as useful. A multi-component, personalized smartphone application was the desired intervention technique. Such an intervention developed and implemented within a public health program could help address the tobacco epidemic in Indonesia.
BACKGROUND The size of the Indonesian population and the shifting pattern of illness from infectious to non-communicable diseases (NCDs), which leads to double disease burden, demand that Indonesia develop a variety of innovative efforts to control the numbers of NCDs. Moreover, NCDs are preventable and strongly influenced by lifestyle, therefore individual intervention to stimulate healthier lifestyle is important. One approach to support NCD programs is the use of mobile technology or mHealth. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this work is to show the process of designing and developing a mobile health system, NusaHealth, which will be implemented in rural areas of Yogyakarta province. The NusaHealth system will be our pilot project to get better understanding and knowledge how mobile health solution answers the health problems in rural areas in terms of promotion and prevention health services. METHODS Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM) seeks to address the challenges of developing a technology-based health management program. The development of the NusaHealth system starts from looking at the potential of health data that can be processed and enriched to become health information. The NusaHealth project builds a digital healthcare infrastructure involving universities, healthcare providers (hospitals, community health centers, clinics, health offices and others) and communities (including health volunteers) in a mHealth approach that puts patient at the center of health care. RESULTS The NusaHealth system has been realized through the process of design and development which involved experts and partners. Technical descriptions including supported device specifications, operating systems requirements, feature needed, user interface, data storage, interoperability and security assessment produced in the paper. Moreover, the infrastructure to connect mobile devices network with the hospital information system has been developed, as well as supporting systems such as SMS gateway and servers. CONCLUSIONS This paper proves that the process of designing and developing a mobile health solution for rural areas in developing countries needs to be comprehensive and the process of field implementation should involve related partners. While the NusaHealth pilot project in rural areas of Yogyakarta province was successfully implemented, further activities need to be implemented to enhance community health through development of formal mobile health system supported by local health district offices’ policies and regulations. Wider geographical areas will be a challenging opportunity in measuring whether this system is suitable in the context of developing country. CLINICALTRIAL None
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.