Identifying an effective mobile health application for the self-management of allergic rhinitis and asthma in Australia

J Asthma. 2020 Oct;57(10):1128-1139. doi: 10.1080/02770903.2019.1640728. Epub 2019 Jul 24.

Abstract

Objective: People with allergic rhinitis (AR) often self-manage in the community pharmacy setting without consulting health care professionals and trivialize their comorbidities such as asthma. A mobile health application (mHealth app) with a self-monitoring and medication adherence system can assist with the appropriate self-management of AR and asthma. This study aimed to identify an app effective for the self-management of AR and/or asthma.Methods: MHealth apps retrieved from the Australian Apple App Store and Android Google Play Store were included in this study if they were developed for self-management of AR and/or asthma; in English language; free of charge for the full version; and accessible to users of the mHealth app. The mHealth app quality was evaluated on three domains using a two-stage process. In Stage 1, the apps were ranked along Domain 1 (Accessibility in both app stores). In Stage 2, the apps with Stage 1, maximum score were ranked along Domain 2 (alignment with theoretical principles of the self-management of AR and/or asthma) and Domain 3 (usability of the mHealth app using Mobile App Rating Scale instrument).Results: Of the 418 apps retrieved, 31 were evaluated in Stage 1 and 16 in Stage 2. The MASK-air achieved the highest mean rank and covered all self-management principles except the doctor's appointment reminder and scored a total MARS mean score of 0.91/1.Conclusions:MASK-air is ranked most highly across the assessment domains for the self-management of both AR and coexisting asthma. This mHealth app covers the majority of the self-management principles and is highly engaging.

Keywords: Allergic rhinitis; asthma; health care professionals; mobile health applications; self-management; suboptimal management.

MeSH terms

  • Asthma / epidemiology*
  • Asthma / therapy*
  • Australia / epidemiology
  • Humans
  • Mobile Applications / standards*
  • Rhinitis, Allergic / epidemiology*
  • Rhinitis, Allergic / therapy*
  • Self Care
  • Self-Management / methods*
  • Smartphone
  • Telemedicine