Characterizing the US Population by Patterns of Mobile Health Use for Health and Behavioral Tracking: Analysis of the National Cancer Institute's Health Information National Trends Survey Data

May 15, 2020Journal of medical Internet research

Patterns of Mobile Health App Use for Tracking Health and Behavior in the US Population

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Abstract

Being in the mHealth nonowners and nonusers category is associated with males, older age, lower income, and not being a health information seeker.

  • Five distinct patterns of mHealth use were identified: nonowners/nonusers, supertrackers, app trackers, device trackers, and nontrackers.
  • Device trackers are more likely to be male, older, have lower income, have chronic conditions, and not seek health information compared to supertrackers.
  • Older age groups (50-64 years and 65+) have significantly higher odds of being device trackers compared to the youngest age group (18-34 years).
  • Individuals with an annual household income of $20,000 to $49,999 are more likely to be device trackers than those with an income of $75,000 or more.
  • Similar sociodemographic characteristics exist between device trackers and mHealth nonowners/nonusers, suggesting potential target groups for mHealth interventions.

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