“…At the eHealth programming and intervention level, two recent eHealth scoping reviews also summarize progress of eHealth applications in child health promotion and in LMIC contexts. In the eHealth applications for child health, Barros and Greffin’s (24) review (24) of 119 technology-based, parent-focused interventions found that different formats of web-based applications have targeted parents and aimed at health-related promotion, via both prevention and treatment support (e.g., universal preventions and interventions focused on adaptation to and management of chronic/severe acute health conditions). Most of these e-parent interventions were adapted from evidence-based interventions (EBIs), focused on child physical health (i.e., obesity, healthy eating, vaccination, child safety, alcohol/substance use, health service use, oral health, sexual, and reproductive health), and based on studies from high-income countries.…”