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Acceptability of using mobile Health (mHealth) as an intervention tool for people with drug use disorders in Tanga, Tanzania

Evidence on the additional benefit in treatment and recovery process among PWDUD using digital health interventions is lacking. This study aimed to describe the acceptability of using a digital intervention to increase information access for PWDUD in Tanga region, Tanzania. This study was conducted...

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Autores principales: Munishi, Castory, Ndumwa, Harrieth P., Massawe, Josephine E., Njiro, Belinda J., Ngowi, Jackline, Suhartono, Sanita, Busse, Anja, Campello, Giovanna, Garofalo, Giovanna, Cipolla, Pietro, Nyandindi, Cassian, Ubuguyu, Omary, Sunguya, Bruno
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10530012/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37756266
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000257
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author Munishi, Castory
Ndumwa, Harrieth P.
Massawe, Josephine E.
Njiro, Belinda J.
Ngowi, Jackline
Suhartono, Sanita
Busse, Anja
Campello, Giovanna
Garofalo, Giovanna
Cipolla, Pietro
Nyandindi, Cassian
Ubuguyu, Omary
Sunguya, Bruno
author_facet Munishi, Castory
Ndumwa, Harrieth P.
Massawe, Josephine E.
Njiro, Belinda J.
Ngowi, Jackline
Suhartono, Sanita
Busse, Anja
Campello, Giovanna
Garofalo, Giovanna
Cipolla, Pietro
Nyandindi, Cassian
Ubuguyu, Omary
Sunguya, Bruno
author_sort Munishi, Castory
collection PubMed
description Evidence on the additional benefit in treatment and recovery process among PWDUD using digital health interventions is lacking. This study aimed to describe the acceptability of using a digital intervention to increase information access for PWDUD in Tanga region, Tanzania. This study was conducted among 465 participants in Tanga, a coastal region on the Northeast of Tanzania has the second highest number of PWDUD in Tanzania. This cross-sectional descriptive study used both quantitative and qualitative approaches. The majority of the PWDUD 67.6% do not own mobile phones. Out of the 156 participants with mobile phones, only 6.4% owned a smartphone. Most of the participants, 83.6%, reported living with someone who owns a mobile phone. Importantly, a significant number of participants, 98.5% from both areas showed readiness to use mobile phones to access information about the harmful use of substance and substance use disorder treatment options. Participants described how mobile phones can be useful to them in accessing information related to treatment and access to treatment options. The findings of this study helped to inform the target audience for the developed Huru App that should not be only PWDUD but the community at large.
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spelling pubmed-105300122023-09-28 Acceptability of using mobile Health (mHealth) as an intervention tool for people with drug use disorders in Tanga, Tanzania Munishi, Castory Ndumwa, Harrieth P. Massawe, Josephine E. Njiro, Belinda J. Ngowi, Jackline Suhartono, Sanita Busse, Anja Campello, Giovanna Garofalo, Giovanna Cipolla, Pietro Nyandindi, Cassian Ubuguyu, Omary Sunguya, Bruno PLOS Digit Health Research Article Evidence on the additional benefit in treatment and recovery process among PWDUD using digital health interventions is lacking. This study aimed to describe the acceptability of using a digital intervention to increase information access for PWDUD in Tanga region, Tanzania. This study was conducted among 465 participants in Tanga, a coastal region on the Northeast of Tanzania has the second highest number of PWDUD in Tanzania. This cross-sectional descriptive study used both quantitative and qualitative approaches. The majority of the PWDUD 67.6% do not own mobile phones. Out of the 156 participants with mobile phones, only 6.4% owned a smartphone. Most of the participants, 83.6%, reported living with someone who owns a mobile phone. Importantly, a significant number of participants, 98.5% from both areas showed readiness to use mobile phones to access information about the harmful use of substance and substance use disorder treatment options. Participants described how mobile phones can be useful to them in accessing information related to treatment and access to treatment options. The findings of this study helped to inform the target audience for the developed Huru App that should not be only PWDUD but the community at large. Public Library of Science 2023-09-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10530012/ /pubmed/37756266 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000257 Text en © 2023 Munishi et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Munishi, Castory
Ndumwa, Harrieth P.
Massawe, Josephine E.
Njiro, Belinda J.
Ngowi, Jackline
Suhartono, Sanita
Busse, Anja
Campello, Giovanna
Garofalo, Giovanna
Cipolla, Pietro
Nyandindi, Cassian
Ubuguyu, Omary
Sunguya, Bruno
Acceptability of using mobile Health (mHealth) as an intervention tool for people with drug use disorders in Tanga, Tanzania
title Acceptability of using mobile Health (mHealth) as an intervention tool for people with drug use disorders in Tanga, Tanzania
title_full Acceptability of using mobile Health (mHealth) as an intervention tool for people with drug use disorders in Tanga, Tanzania
title_fullStr Acceptability of using mobile Health (mHealth) as an intervention tool for people with drug use disorders in Tanga, Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Acceptability of using mobile Health (mHealth) as an intervention tool for people with drug use disorders in Tanga, Tanzania
title_short Acceptability of using mobile Health (mHealth) as an intervention tool for people with drug use disorders in Tanga, Tanzania
title_sort acceptability of using mobile health (mhealth) as an intervention tool for people with drug use disorders in tanga, tanzania
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10530012/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37756266
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000257
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