Cell phone usage among adolescents in Uganda: acceptability for relaying health information.

No Thumbnail Available
Date
2011-09-08
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The increase in cell phone use has manifested a growing interest in using this technology for health promotion The portability and always on features of the cell phone along with increasing capability for the devices to carry and transfer data suggest that they will reach more people than computers and the Internet in coming years Self reported quantitative survey data from 1503 secondary school students in Mbarara Uganda collected in 2008 2009 suggest that 27 currently have cell phones and about half 51 of all students and 61 of those who owned a cell phone believe that they would access a text messaging based HIV prevention program if it were available Other forms of program delivery modality e g Internet religious organizations schools were preferred to text messaging however We are in need of effective HIV prevention programs that can reach large audiences at low cost and are culturally relevant for the East African context Researchers are encouraged to consider translation of effective HIV prevention programs for cell phone delivery in Africa
Description
Keywords
Young people (10-24 years), Client, Communication roadblocks, Addressing individual beliefs and practices, Alignment with local norms, Geographic inaccessibility, Pre-prototype, Feasibility, Health education or promotion, Text, SMS
Citation
Collections