来源: The Lancet
2009年1月8日 | EN
Flickr/fensterbme
Mobile phone technologies could prevent tuberculosis (TB) patients from abandoning treatment — a problem that can affect up to 20 per cent of patients in developing countries.
Patients abandon treatment due to side-effects or because they feel better, rendering them infectious for longer, and making them more likely to relapse and die or develop resistant strains.
The WHO recommends a regime known as DOTS (directly observed treatment, short course) in which a health worker watches the patient take their antibiotics. But this is inaccessible for many patients, expensive and human-resource intensive.
To help combat this, companies are harnessing increasing access to mobile phones — even in the poorest parts of the world — to remind patients to take their medication.
The technologies include a pill bottle that sends a message to a central server when opened; patients dialling into a server after taking medication and patients generating a code to send to a server by urinating on a diagnostic which detects whether they have taken their drug.
Questions have been raised as to whether mobile phone technologies can effectively replace face-to-face contact, but others note that mobile phone technologies enable health workers to monitor a greater number of patients, as well as freeing them to focus on patients who require most attention.
Link to full article in The Lancet*
*Free registration is required to view this article
添加你的评论
所有的评论都要接受审核,我们保留对评中包括 不适当/不适合的语言进行编辑的权利。科学与发展网络享有网站发布所有内容的版权。请查看使用条款了解详情。
您需要注册后发表评论或者给作者发送评论的邮件。请登陆或注册。 登陆 或者 注册.