2021
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-020-02706-z
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Smartphone App for monitoring Asthma in children and adolescents

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
18
0

Year Published

2021
2021
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
6

Relationship

0
6

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 16 publications
(21 citation statements)
references
References 105 publications
1
18
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The results reinforce the observation that PROMs are communicative tools and their use is a contextspecific intentional process, a perspective that informs the implementation, use, and research on PROMs increasingly [16][17][18][19][20]. The fourth paper [21] describes the development of a smartphone app for monitoring asthma in children and adolescents in seven distinct phases from conceptualization to usability evaluation. The paper presents a substantial amount of process learning and especially the discussion of technical and legal issues that the project faced are a unique contribution within this special issue, which highlights important operational aspects to consider when developing such systems.…”
Section: The Special Issuesupporting
confidence: 69%
“…The results reinforce the observation that PROMs are communicative tools and their use is a contextspecific intentional process, a perspective that informs the implementation, use, and research on PROMs increasingly [16][17][18][19][20]. The fourth paper [21] describes the development of a smartphone app for monitoring asthma in children and adolescents in seven distinct phases from conceptualization to usability evaluation. The paper presents a substantial amount of process learning and especially the discussion of technical and legal issues that the project faced are a unique contribution within this special issue, which highlights important operational aspects to consider when developing such systems.…”
Section: The Special Issuesupporting
confidence: 69%
“…As a future use, results derived by this study may also serve as socioeconomically and medically stratified population references for individual monitoring of HRQoL. Approaches using the EQ-5D instrument are under development for patient groups in oncology, asthma and diabetes [38][39][40]. With monitoring extending to other patient and population groups, population reference values are set to increase in relevance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Out of 19 publications that utilized some mHealth app for patient monitoring, 13 (68.4%) publications [39] , [40] , [41] , [44] , [45] , [46] , [47] , [48] , [49] , [50] , [51] , [52] , [53] tested the apps which had been developed by publication authors. An interesting app developing model has been presented in one publication [51] .…”
Section: Descriptive Semi-structured and Structured Evidence Synthesesmentioning
confidence: 99%