An article from the Journal of Medical Internet Research: DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.4302
From the article in JMIR:
The risk of poor sexual health, including unplanned pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections (STIs), is greatest amongst young people. Innovative and acceptable interventions to improve sexual health are required. Mobile phone text messaging (short message service, SMS) interventions have the potential to reach large numbers of people at relatively low cost, but greater understanding is needed on how these interventions should be developed and how they work.
mFHAST Implications: Opportunity for text messaging interventions to promote safer sex behavior in young people.
Article rating: No rating
An article from the European Journal of Pediatrics
From the PubMed article abstract: "The aim of our study was to examine the association between problematic cell phone use (PCPU) for text messaging and substance abuse in young adolescents. This cross-sectional study was conducted on the basis of an ad hoc questionnaire, during the 2014-2015 school year in a province of the Veneto Region (Italy); it involved a sample of 1156 students in grades 6 to 8 (11 to 13 years old). A self-report scale based on the Short Message Service (SMS) Problem Use Diagnostic Questionnaire (SMS-PUDQ) was administered to assess the sample's PCPU."
mFHAST Implications: Methods for measuring Problematic Cell Phone Use
Article rating: No rating
An article from the Journal of Pediatric Care
From the article abstract: "The purpose of this secondary data analysis was to assess correlations among the study variables (healthy lifestyle beliefs, perceived difficulty, and healthy lifestyle behaviors) in parents of overweight/obese preschool children. A second aim explored if the parent's level of cognitive beliefs and perceived difficulty of engaging in healthy lifestyle behaviors correlated with text messaging cognitive behavioral support."
mFHAST Implications: Delivery of behavioral therapy intervention for parents of obese children through text messages.
Article rating: No rating
An article from the Journal of Biomedical Informatics
From the PubMed article abstract: "Youth are prolific users of cell phone minutes and text messaging. Numerous programs using short message service text messaging (SMS) have been employed to help improve health behaviors and health outcomes. However, we lack information on whether and what type of interaction or engagement with SMS program content is required to realize any benefit. We explored youth engagement with an automated SMS program designed to supplement a 25-session youth development program with demonstrated efficacy for reductions in teen pregnancy."
mFHAST Implications: Design of message content and response frequency for youth based SMS interventions
Article rating: No rating
An article from the Journal of Medical Internet Research
Background posted in PubMed: "Pregnancy and the postpartum period provide windows of opportunity to impact perinatal and lifelong preventive health behavior for women and their families, but these opportunities are often missed. Understanding racial/ethnic differences in information and communication technology (ICT) use could inform technology-based interventions in diverse populations."
mFHAST Implications: Cultural differences in use of SMS for pregnancy-related communications
Article rating: No rating