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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Nov 10, 2020
Date Accepted: Sep 14, 2021
Date Submitted to PubMed: Sep 15, 2021

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Mobile Health Apps for Pregnant Women: Systematic Search, Evaluation, and Analysis of Features

Frid G, Bogaert K, Chen K

Mobile Health Apps for Pregnant Women: Systematic Search, Evaluation, and Analysis of Features

J Med Internet Res 2021;23(10):e25667

DOI: 10.2196/25667

PMID: 34524100

PMCID: 8561408

In Search of Mobile Health Apps Available for Pregnant Women: Qualitative Study

  • Gabriela Frid; 
  • Kelly Bogaert; 
  • Katherine Chen

ABSTRACT

Background:

Many pregnant women use the internet to obtain information about pregnancy and childbirth. Over 50% of pregnant women use pregnancy applications (apps) and must search through thousands of pregnancy or women’s health-related apps available on app stores. COVID-19 is changing how women receive prenatal care and their satisfaction with it, leading them to rely more on other sources of information.

Objective:

Our objective is to identify mobile apps recommended when a Google search is performed and to evaluate the apps’ features using a modified APPLICATIONS scoring system. 

Methods:

A list of pregnancy apps was identified in the first 20 Google search results using the search term “pregnancy app” and “pregnancy apps.” After excluding apps irrelevant to the study, all unique apps were downloaded and evaluated with the modified APPLICATION scoring system, which includes both objective and subjective criteria and evaluation of special features. 

Results:

A total of 57 unique pregnancy apps were generated. 28 apps were excluded for irrelevance, inaccuracy, malfunctioning, or no longer available. 29 apps were evaluated, with a mean score of 9.4 points out of a maximum of 16. The highest scoring app scored 15 points. The top five highest scoring apps were all included in the first article in a Google search result and four of them were also the highest mentioned among all articles.

Conclusions:

Identification of pregnancy apps through a Google search yielded high-scoring apps that were mentioned in multiple articles, yet few contain all the desired qualities. While healthcare providers should continue to vet apps before recommending them to patients, these findings highlight that a Google search is a successful way for patients and providers to find useful and comprehensive pregnancy applications.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Frid G, Bogaert K, Chen K

Mobile Health Apps for Pregnant Women: Systematic Search, Evaluation, and Analysis of Features

J Med Internet Res 2021;23(10):e25667

DOI: 10.2196/25667

PMID: 34524100

PMCID: 8561408

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