Background:
The presence of overweight and obesity among children is increasing in
large parts of the world. Lack of physical activity is one of the causes of overweight and
obesity. For children with obesity, small amounts of physical activity may have major
positive health effects. There is a need to develop new effective strategies to increase the
amount of physical activity among children with overweight or obesity. Mobile health
(mHealth) is used as an umbrella term for health services transmitted by mobile devices
and is defined as "medical or public health practice supported by mobile devices such as
mobile phones, patient monitoring devices, personal digital assistants and other wireless
devices." A potential strategy for influencing the amount of physical activity in children
with overweight or obesity is mHealth through the use of mobile phones.
Objective:
To examine and describe what interventions with mHealth component
through the use of mobile phones that evaluated physical activity or Body Mass Index
(BMI) in children with overweight or obesity.
Methods:
A systematic literature study in which studies describing interventions with
mHealth components for the target group of children 0-18 years of overweight or obesity
were included. Search was conducted in three scientific databases.
Results:
The searches resulted in 649 studies, of which 16 met set inclusion criteria. In
most studies, the mHealth component included the use of text messaging and in some
studies the use of app. The function of the mHealth component was studied and divided
into self-registration, communication, encouragement, education and reminder. The
included studies reported different forms of BMI where two studies showed significant
differences between the intervention and control group with the greatest reduction for
the intervention group. Few studies reported objectively measured time in physical
activity of moderate to high intensity.
Conclusion:
The most common intervention with mHealth component through the use
of mobile phones among children with overweight or obesity was text messaging. In
order to understand and compare how mHealth can be used, a framework for the
description of these interventions would facilitate.