Popular Glucose Tracking Apps and Use of mHealth by Latinos With Diabetes: Review

BackgroundDiabetes mellitus in the United States is an increasingly common chronic disease, costing hundreds of billions of dollars and contributing to hundreds of thousands of deaths each year. The prevalence of diabetes is over 50% higher in Latinos than in the general pop...

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Main Authors: Williams, John Patrick, Schroeder, Dirk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2015-08-01
Series:JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Online Access:http://mhealth.jmir.org/2015/3/e84/
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spelling doaj-f9c62d0461974f7c9a0c29a811894acd2021-05-02T19:27:55ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR mHealth and uHealth2291-52222015-08-0133e8410.2196/mhealth.3986Popular Glucose Tracking Apps and Use of mHealth by Latinos With Diabetes: ReviewWilliams, John PatrickSchroeder, Dirk BackgroundDiabetes mellitus in the United States is an increasingly common chronic disease, costing hundreds of billions of dollars and contributing to hundreds of thousands of deaths each year. The prevalence of diabetes is over 50% higher in Latinos than in the general population, and this group also suffers from higher rates of complications and diabetes-related mortality than NHWs. mHealth is a promising new treatment modality for diabetes, though few smartphone apps have been designed specifically for Latinos. ObjectiveThe objectives of our study were: (1) to identify the most common features of the most popular diabetes apps and consider how such features may be improved to meet the needs of Latinos; (2) to determine the use of diabetes apps among a sample of online Hispanics in the US. MethodsOur study consisted of two parts. First, 20 of the most popular diabetes apps were reviewed in order to ascertain the most prevalent features and functionalities. Second, an online survey was fielded through a popular health website for Latinos (HolaDoctor) inquiring about respondents’ use of diabetes apps. ResultsApproximately one-third of apps reviewed were available in Spanish. The most common features were blood glucose recording/annotation and activity logs. The majority of apps permitted exportation of data via e-mail but only a third enabled uploading to an online account. Twenty percent of apps reviewed could connect directly with a glucometer, and 30% had reminder functionalities prompting patients to take medications or check blood glucose levels. Over 1600 online surveys were completed during the second half of April 2014. More than 90% of respondents were from the United States, including Puerto Rico. The majority of respondents used a device running on an Android platform while only a quarter used an iPhone. Use of diabetes apps was approximately 3% among diabetic respondents and 3.6% among diabetic respondents who also had a smartphone. Among app users, blood glucose and medication diaries were the most frequently used functionalities while hemoglobin A1c and insulin diaries were the least used. A significant majority of app users did not share their progress on social media though many of these were willing to share it with their doctor. ConclusionsLatino diabetics have unique needs and this should be reflected in diabetes apps designed for this population. Existing research as well as our survey results suggest that many Latinos do not possess the prerequisite diabetes knowledge or self-awareness to fully benefit from the most prevalent functionalities offered by the most popular diabetes apps. We recommend developers incorporate more basic features such as diabetes education, reminders to check blood glucose levels or take medications, Spanish language interfaces, and glucometer connectivities, which are relatively underrepresented in the most popular diabetes apps currently available in Spanish.http://mhealth.jmir.org/2015/3/e84/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Williams, John Patrick
Schroeder, Dirk
spellingShingle Williams, John Patrick
Schroeder, Dirk
Popular Glucose Tracking Apps and Use of mHealth by Latinos With Diabetes: Review
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
author_facet Williams, John Patrick
Schroeder, Dirk
author_sort Williams, John Patrick
title Popular Glucose Tracking Apps and Use of mHealth by Latinos With Diabetes: Review
title_short Popular Glucose Tracking Apps and Use of mHealth by Latinos With Diabetes: Review
title_full Popular Glucose Tracking Apps and Use of mHealth by Latinos With Diabetes: Review
title_fullStr Popular Glucose Tracking Apps and Use of mHealth by Latinos With Diabetes: Review
title_full_unstemmed Popular Glucose Tracking Apps and Use of mHealth by Latinos With Diabetes: Review
title_sort popular glucose tracking apps and use of mhealth by latinos with diabetes: review
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR mHealth and uHealth
issn 2291-5222
publishDate 2015-08-01
description BackgroundDiabetes mellitus in the United States is an increasingly common chronic disease, costing hundreds of billions of dollars and contributing to hundreds of thousands of deaths each year. The prevalence of diabetes is over 50% higher in Latinos than in the general population, and this group also suffers from higher rates of complications and diabetes-related mortality than NHWs. mHealth is a promising new treatment modality for diabetes, though few smartphone apps have been designed specifically for Latinos. ObjectiveThe objectives of our study were: (1) to identify the most common features of the most popular diabetes apps and consider how such features may be improved to meet the needs of Latinos; (2) to determine the use of diabetes apps among a sample of online Hispanics in the US. MethodsOur study consisted of two parts. First, 20 of the most popular diabetes apps were reviewed in order to ascertain the most prevalent features and functionalities. Second, an online survey was fielded through a popular health website for Latinos (HolaDoctor) inquiring about respondents’ use of diabetes apps. ResultsApproximately one-third of apps reviewed were available in Spanish. The most common features were blood glucose recording/annotation and activity logs. The majority of apps permitted exportation of data via e-mail but only a third enabled uploading to an online account. Twenty percent of apps reviewed could connect directly with a glucometer, and 30% had reminder functionalities prompting patients to take medications or check blood glucose levels. Over 1600 online surveys were completed during the second half of April 2014. More than 90% of respondents were from the United States, including Puerto Rico. The majority of respondents used a device running on an Android platform while only a quarter used an iPhone. Use of diabetes apps was approximately 3% among diabetic respondents and 3.6% among diabetic respondents who also had a smartphone. Among app users, blood glucose and medication diaries were the most frequently used functionalities while hemoglobin A1c and insulin diaries were the least used. A significant majority of app users did not share their progress on social media though many of these were willing to share it with their doctor. ConclusionsLatino diabetics have unique needs and this should be reflected in diabetes apps designed for this population. Existing research as well as our survey results suggest that many Latinos do not possess the prerequisite diabetes knowledge or self-awareness to fully benefit from the most prevalent functionalities offered by the most popular diabetes apps. We recommend developers incorporate more basic features such as diabetes education, reminders to check blood glucose levels or take medications, Spanish language interfaces, and glucometer connectivities, which are relatively underrepresented in the most popular diabetes apps currently available in Spanish.
url http://mhealth.jmir.org/2015/3/e84/
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