@文章{信息:doi/10.2196/16030,作者=“李,春燕和熊,元和Sit,郝芳和唐,韦明和霍尔,布莱恩J和Muessig,凯瑟琳E和韦,崇义和鲍,环宇和韦,舒芳和张,大鹏和米,国栋和宇,飞和塔克,约瑟夫D”,标题=“一个男人与男人发生性行为——友好的医生搜索黑客松在中国广州:提高医疗保健利用的移动健康干预措施的开发”,期刊=“JMIR移动健康Uhealth”,年=“2020”,月=“2月”,日=“27”,卷=“8”,数=“2”,页=“e16030”,关键词=“移动健康;这家网站;众包;与男性发生性关系的男性;MSM-friendly;背景:基于移动健康(mHeath)在男男性行为者(MSM)中推广艾滋病毒和性健康在低收入和中等收入环境中是可行的。然而,目前市场上的许多移动健康工具是由私营部门为盈利而开发的,来自男同性恋者社区的投入有限。目标:健康黑客马拉松是一种密集的竞赛,它将来自多学科背景的参与者聚集在一起,在短时间内为特定的健康问题制定拟议的解决方案。本文的目的是描述一个黑客马拉松事件,该事件旨在开发一个移动健康工具,以提高中国MSM人群的医疗保健(特别是艾滋病毒预防)利用,总结最终原型的特征,并讨论对未来移动健康干预发展的影响。 Methods: The hackathon took place in Guangzhou, China. An open call for hackathon participants was advertised on 3 Chinese social media platforms, including Blued, a popular social networking app among MSM. All applicants completed a Web-based survey and were then scored. The top scoring applicants were grouped into teams based on their skills and content area expertise. Each team was allowed 1 month to prepare for the hackathon. The teams then came together in person with on-site expert mentorship for a 72-hour hackathon contest to develop and present mHealth prototype solutions. The judging panel included experts in psychology, public health, computer science, social media, clinical medicine, and MSM advocacy. The final prototypes were evaluated based on innovation, usability, and feasibility. Results: We received 92 applicants, and 38 of them were selected to attend the April 2019 hackathon. A total of 8 teams were formed, including expertise in computer science, user interface design, business or marketing, clinical medicine, and public health. Moreover, 24 participants self-identified as gay, and 3 participants self-identified as bisexual. All teams successfully developed a prototype tool. A total of 4 prototypes were designed as a mini program that could be embedded within a popular Chinese social networking app, and 3 prototypes were designed as stand-alone apps. Common prototype functions included Web-based physician searching based on one's location (8 prototypes), health education (4 prototypes), Web-based health counseling with providers or lay health volunteers (6 prototypes), appointment scheduling (8 prototypes), and between-user communication (2 prototypes). All prototypes included strategies to ensure privacy protection for MSM users, and some prototypes offered strategies to ensure privacy of physicians. The selected prototypes are undergoing pilot testing. Conclusions: This study demonstrated the feasibility and acceptability of using a hackathon to create mHealth intervention tools. This suggests a different pathway to developing mHealth interventions and could be relevant in other settings. ", issn="2291-5222", doi="10.2196/16030", url="http://mhealth.www.mybigtv.com/2020/2/e16030/", url="https://doi.org/10.2196/16030", url="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32130189" }
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