Mobile response in web panels

M De Bruijne, A Wijnant - Social Science Computer Review, 2014 - journals.sagepub.com
This article investigates unintended mobile access to surveys in online, probability-based
panels. We find that spontaneous tablet usage is drastically increasing in web surveys, while …

[HTML][HTML] App chronic disease checklist: protocol to evaluate mobile apps for chronic disease self-management

K Anderson, O Burford, L Emmerton - JMIR research …, 2016 - researchprotocols.org
Background: The availability of mobile health apps for self-care continues to increase. While
little evidence of their clinical impact has been published, there is general agreement among …

Web surveys by smartphones and tablets: Effects on data quality

R Tourangeau, H Sun, T Yan… - Social Science …, 2018 - journals.sagepub.com
Does completing a web survey on a smartphone or tablet computer reduce the quality of the
data obtained compared to completing the survey on a laptop computer? This is an …

[HTML][HTML] Apps and adolescents: a systematic review of adolescents' use of mobile phone and tablet apps that support personal management of their chronic or long …

R Majeed-Ariss, E Baildam, M Campbell… - Journal of medical …, 2015 - jmir.org
Background The prevalence of physical chronic or long-term conditions in adolescents aged
10-24 years is rising. Mobile phone and tablet mobile technologies featuring software …

The role of medical smartphone apps in clinical decision-support: A literature review

HA Watson, RM Tribe, AH Shennan - Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, 2019 - Elsevier
Introduction The now ubiquitous smartphone has huge potential to assist clinical decision-
making across the globe. However, the rapid pace of digitalisation contrasts starkly with the …

[HTML][HTML] Smartphones for smarter delivery of mental health programs: a systematic review

T Donker, K Petrie, J Proudfoot, J Clarke… - Journal of medical …, 2013 - jmir.org
Background: The rapid growth in the use of mobile phone applications (apps) provides the
opportunity to increase access to evidence-based mental health care. Objective: Our goal …

Standalone smartphone apps for mental health—a systematic review and meta-analysis

KK Weisel, LM Fuhrmann, M Berking… - NPJ digital …, 2019 - nature.com
While smartphone usage is ubiquitous, and the app market for smartphone apps targeted at
mental health is growing rapidly, the evidence of standalone apps for treating mental health …

[HTML][HTML] Influences on the uptake of and engagement with health and well-being smartphone apps: systematic review

D Szinay, A Jones, T Chadborn, J Brown… - Journal of medical …, 2020 - jmir.org
Background The public health impact of health and well-being digital interventions is
dependent upon sufficient real-world uptake and engagement. Uptake is currently largely …

The use of smartphones for health research

ER Dorsey, MV McConnell, SY Shaw… - Academic …, 2017 - journals.lww.com
Because of their growing popularity and functionality, smartphones are increasingly
valuable potential tools for health and medical research. Using ResearchKit, Apple's open …

The efficacy of app‐supported smartphone interventions for mental health problems: A meta‐analysis of randomized controlled trials

J Linardon, P Cuijpers, P Carlbring, M Messer… - World …, 2019 - Wiley Online Library
Although impressive progress has been made toward developing empirically‐supported
psychological treatments, the reality remains that a significant proportion of people with …