mHealth (also written as m-health) is an abbreviation for mobile health, a term used for the practice of medicine and public health supported by mobile devices.
mHealth applications include the use of mobile devices in collecting community and clinical health data, delivery of healthcare information to practitioners, researchers, and patients, real-time monitoring of patient vital signs, and direct provision of care (via mobile telemedicine).
USAFP Mobile Device/mHealth Pages
- USAFP Mobile Device/mHealth Page (This page)
- Mobile Device/mHealth Tools Page
- Medical Mobile Device/mHealth Sites Page
- Medical Reference Page
- Operational Mobile Device/mHealth Page
mHealth News
- Figuring out the Google Glass conundrum
A Texas-based startup says Google’s high-concept consumer device does have a fit in healthcare – but it’s not as eye-opening as one might think - Could gamification be a secret to cutting costs?
Gaming and mobile health technologies hold great promise for reducing critical
care situations and emergency room visits by enticing patients to be more
engaged in their own health - So many diabetes apps but so few users
Diabetes apps aren’t being used because they’re too difficult and don’t do what
users want. Even though diabetes apps have perhaps the best business upside of
anything in mHealth. - Top 10 connected health predictions 2014
- Will home health monitoring work if it’s sold directly to consumers?
- Why clinical trials need mobile health tools
- The limits of telemedicine
- Consumers reshaping healthcare landscape
- Butler Health System Gains 50% Improvement in Physical Therapy Documentation Time with EMR Voice Overlay Technology