The oncologist | 2021

Acceptability, utility, and cost of an mHealth cancer screening education application for training primary care physicians in India.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


PURPOSE\nMobile health (mHealth)-based oncology education can be a powerful tool for providing cancer screening knowledge to physicians, as mobile technology is widely available and inexpensive. We developed a mobile application (M-OncoED) to educate physicians on cancer screening and tested the acceptability, utility, and cost of two different approaches to recruit physicians.\n\n\nMETHODS\nM-OncoED was designed to perform pre- and post-learning assessments through the in-built quizzes; present case studies and educational materials for cervical, breast, and oral cancer screening; collect responses to interactive queries; document module completion; send reminders and alerts; and track user metrics, including number of sessions to complete each module and time spent per session. We tested two recruitment approaches: a broad-scale recruitment group, for which we relied on emails, messaging apps (e.g., WhatsApp), and phone calls, and the targeted recruitment group, for which we conducted a face-to-face meeting for the initial invitation.\n\n\nRESULTS\nOverall, about 35% of those invited in the targeted group completed the course compared with about 3% in the broad-based recruitment group. The targeted recruitment approach was more cost efficient ($55.33 versus $109.43 per person). Cervical cancer screening knowledge increased by about 30 percentage points, and breast cancer screening knowledge increased by 10 percentage points. There was no change in knowledge for oral cancer scorings.\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nThis study has demonstrated the feasibility and utility of using an mHealth app to educate physicians. A more-intensive hands-on recruitment approach is likely required to engage physicians to download and complete the app. Future studies should assess the impact of mHealth tools on physician behavior and patient outcomes.\n\n\nIMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE\nMobile health (mHealth)-based oncology education can be a powerful tool for providing cancer screening knowledge to physicians, as mobile technology is widely available and inexpensive. This study has demonstrated the feasibility and utility of using an mHealth app to educate physicians, and illustrates the type of recruitment approach (face-to-face) that is likely required to incentivize physicians to download the app and complete the training.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1002/onco.13904
Language English
Journal The oncologist

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