Mobile Apps to Improve Health Parameters in Healthy Adults: Systematic Review
Gaia Leuzzi, Mirko Job, Carola Cosentino, Riccardo Testa, Aldo Scafoglieri, Marco Testa

TL;DR
This systematic review found limited evidence on whether mobile apps can improve health in healthy adults due to methodological issues in existing studies.
Contribution
The study systematically evaluates the effectiveness of mobile apps for health improvement in healthy adults, highlighting a lack of rigorous evidence.
Findings
Only two low-quality studies on physical activity apps were included, with no studies on diet or combined interventions.
The evidence for mobile apps' effectiveness in improving health parameters remains uncertain due to methodological flaws.
There is a need for more rigorous research to assess the potential of mobile apps in health prevention and improvement.
Abstract
Recently, mobile health and mobile apps have been proposed as a potential tool to improve different outcomes (eg, daily steps, blood glucose) in both people with and without chronic conditions. In particular, healthy people could benefit from these tools by improving health variables and for prevention. Previous evidence investigated different types of health interventions adopting apps in various settings and populations, but evidence of their effectiveness is still unclear. The aim was to assess the effectiveness of mobile apps in improving health variables (eg, daily steps, maximal aerobic capacity) in healthy adults, involving an intervention regarding physical activity, diet, or their combination thereof. Evidence would suggest if apps could be effectively adopted in health interventions aiming toward prevention. A systematic review was performed using Medline via PubMed,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Health and mHealth Applications · Physical Activity and Health · Digital Mental Health Interventions
