Can female fertility management mobile apps be sustainable and contribute to female health care? Harnessing the power of patient generated data ; Analysis of the organizations active in this e-Health segment
Maki Miyamoto, L. F. Pau

TL;DR
This paper examines the sustainability and health benefits of female fertility management mobile apps by analyzing market data, user impact, and potential extensions to broader female healthcare, highlighting conditions for success.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of female fertility apps' market potential, user impact, and strategic directions, including a case study and hypothesis testing.
Findings
Apps help women track and plan fertility cycles effectively
Market potential is large but varies by age segment
Moderate positive contribution to female healthcare with certain conditions
Abstract
In recent years, personal health technologies have emerged that allow patients to collect a wide range of health-related data outside the clinic. These patient-generated data (PGD) reflect patients everyday behaviors including physical activity, mood, diet, sleep, and symptoms. However, major players and academics alike, have ignored the case where these patients or normal people are women. Is analyzed the eHealth segment of female fertility planning mobile apps (in US called: period trackers) and its possible extensions to other female health care mobile services. The market potential is very large although age segmentation applies. These apps help women record and plan their menstruation cycles, their fertility periods, and ease with relevant personalized advice all the uncomfort. As an illustration, the case of a European app service supplier is described in depth. The services of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Health and mHealth Applications · Technology Adoption and User Behaviour · Digital Mental Health Interventions
