Mobile health applications need a
risk assessment model and a framework for supporting clinical use to ensure
patient safety and professional reputation, according to a study published in
the Journal of Medical Internet Research,
FierceHealthIT reports.
Study Details
For the study, researchers at
Warwick Medical School in the United Kingdom analyzed the current regulatory
oversight of mobile apps and identified several different kinds of risks
associated with medical apps and ways to address those risks (Mottl,
FierceHealthIT, 9/20).
The researchers defined a mobile
medical app as "any software application created for or used on a mobile
device for medical or other health-related
purposes."
Study Findings
The researchers noted that there is
not currently a clinically relevant risk assessment framework for mobile
health apps, meaning health care professionals, patients
and mobile app developers
face difficulty in assessing the risks posed by specific apps.
They identified several risks
associated with using mobile health apps, including:
- · Hindering professional reputation;
- · Causing possible patient privacy breaches;
- · Resulting in low-quality; and
- · Providing Poor medical advice.
The authors also outlined some of
the most common variables that can affect those risk factors, including:
- · Apps that contain inaccurate or out-of-date information;
- · Inappropriate use by patients; and
- · Inadequate user education (Lewis et al., Journal of Medical Internet Research, 9/15/14).
Of those, the researchers warned
that a lack of education poses the biggest threat to patient safety and
recommended that health care professionals begin learning about the apps' risks
before prescribing their use to patients.
Overall, the study's authors called
for a formal risk assessment framework for mobile health apps to help reduce
the "residual risk" by identifying and implementing various safety
measures in the future development, procurement and regulation of mobile apps.
They argued that medical apps will flourish in the health care industry after a
process has been created to ensure their quality and safety can be
"reliably assessed and managed" (FierceHealthIT,
9/20).
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