Abstract
Objectives
To layout mHealth (mobile health) applications operating in India with the facility of either online doctor consultation or offline doctor appointment booking.
Methods
A cross-sectional, observational and web-based study was conducted. We searched the Google Play Store with the search strategy “health apps in India”. In the results, 250 applications (apps) appeared. Out of 250 apps, finally, 22 apps were found to be providing online doctor consultation and/or doctor appointment booking-related services.
Results
Among the selected mHealth apps operating in India and providing doctor consultation-related services online/offline, Practo, mfine, DocsApp, 1mg, Netmeds, Lybrate, MediBuddy, and Medlife were found to be the eight most popular ones with over a million downloads and on average four-plus user rating out of five. Practo, mfine, and Lybrate offer doctor consultation through chat, audio, and video calling. Netmeds and DocsApp offer doctor consultation through both chat and audio call. 1mg offers free chat consultation, while MediBuddy and Medlife offer audio call consultation only. Considering booking doctor appointments for offline consultation, Practo, mfine, 1mg, and Lybrate only offer this facility among the eight most popular selected mHealth apps.
Conclusions
mHealth apps providing doctor consultation are gaining popularity in India, and they have enormous potential in the country. The government should make enabling policies to facilitate and popularise mHealth apps.
Keywords: Telemedicine, Mobile Applications, Referral and Consultation, Appointments and Schedules, Delivery of Health Care
I. Introduction
mHealth (mobile health) is one of the components of eHealth. The Global Observatory for eHealth (GOe) defined mHealth as medical and public health practice supported by mobile devices, such as mobile phones, patient monitoring devices, personal digital assistants (PDAs), and other wireless devices. In mHealth, mobile phones and their various utilities are utilised and capitalised upon. The various utilities of a mobile phone are voice calls, short messaging service (SMS), mobile applications (apps), Internet, global positioning system (GPS), Bluetooth technology etc. [1,2].
Globally, there are over 7 billion wireless subscribers, and about 3.9 billion (51.2%) have access to the Internet [3]. In terms of the wireless communication subscriber base, India is second in the world following China with 1,165.5 million mobile phone subscribers in the country (as on June 30, 2019). The teledensity of India is 88.5 (urban, 156.4; rural, 56.7). There were approximately 578.2 million wireless data subscribers in India at the end of 2018, which is 36.3% higher than in 2017 (424.02 million) and 205.4% higher than in 2014 (281.5 million). The volume of average wireless data usage per wireless data subscriber per month has also increased by 185.4% (from 4.1 GB during the year 2017 to 7.7 GB during the year 2018) [4]. This makes the prospect of mHealth in the country higher than ever.
Mobile health technologies are a proven medium of doctor–patient communication and have contributed to significant improvement in the patients’ health outcomes [5,6]. Doctor consultation through mobile health apps is convenient for the doctors and their patients as it saves time and money of both [7–12]. This approach has been found to overcome widespread health system barriers, such as health professional shortages, reliance on untrained and/or informal providers, cost of service, transportation, and lack of sources of reliable information [8,9,13]. In India, the dominant mode of healthcare financing is out of pocket expenditure, and the majority of healthcare is delivered by the private sector [14]. Thus, mHealth, as a proven medium of healthcare delivery, has enormous potential in the country. With urbanisation, the demand for mHealth-related services in the country is likely to increase too [15]. To our knowledge, there has been very little published work in the domain of mHealth applications currently functioning in the country with the provision of doctor consultation online/offline. With this background, the current research is being formulated to overview the mHealth apps operating in India with the facility of either online doctor consultation or offline doctor appointment booking.
II. Case Description
1. Process of Selection of mHealth Applications
A cross-sectional, observational, and web-based study was conducted. Those apps that were providing either online doctor consultation or doctor appointment booking-related services and operating in India were included, while others were excluded. We searched the Google Play Store with the search strategy “health apps in India”. In the results, 250 apps appeared. Out of 250 apps, finally, 22 apps were found to be providing online doctor consultation and/or doctor appointment booking-related services, so they were included in the study. The selection of mobile apps is presented in detail in Figure 1. The data retrieved from the Google Play Store were analysed and represented using Microsoft Excel and Word 2016.
2. Results
All the selected mHealth apps were providing online doctor consultation-related services, with the CallDoc App only providing offline doctor appointment booking-related services. Similarly, doctor appointment booking facility was only provided by Practo, mfine, Lybrate, Ask Apollo, I Online Doctor, CallDoc, DOCTOR INSTA, DocOnline, and India Dental World apps. Among the 22 selected mHealth apps operating in India, Practo, mfine, DocsApp, 1mg, Netmeds, Lybrate, MediBuddy, and Medlife were found to be the eight most popular ones with over a million downloads and on average four-plus user rating out of five. Practo, mfine, and Lybrate offer doctor consultation through chat, audio, and video calling. Netmeds and DocsApp offer doctor consultation through both chat and audio call. 1mg offers free chat consultation, while MediBuddy and Medlife offer audio call consultation only. Practo, mfine, Netmeds, Lybrate, MediBuddy, and DocsApp charge a consultation fee for doctor consultation. Netmeds and mfine offer free follow-up consultation within 7 days of an initial consultation. Practo, mfine, DocsApp, Lybrate, MediBuddy, and Medlife provide an online health record maintenance facility, which 1mg and Netmeds do not offer. Considering booking doctor appointments for offline consultation, Practo, mfine, 1mg, and Lybrate only offer this facility among the eight most popular selected mHealth apps. In Lybrate, after the app has been downloaded, the app asks for background details of the patient, such as gender, age, marital status, height, weight, and existing health conditions to suggest a specialist who should be consulted to address the patient’s given health condition. Practo offers various membership plans for healthcare in which a consumer must pay a certain amount initially to receive unlimited online consultations, free in-clinic consultation, health check-ups, and medicine discount for a certain period of time. The mfine app provides the first doctor consultation for free. MediBuddy tracks the GPS location of the mobile subscriber to suggest nearby doctors of various specialities available for appointment booking with time and date slots. DocsApp asks for age, gender, symptoms, and health concerns before suggesting a specialist to provide the appropriate care for a patient’s needs. In Medlife, one can choose from various specialists available at a particular date and time for consultation. Netmeds offers doctor consultation through chat after the patient has paid an initial consultation fee. Various specialist consultations in addition to the consultations by a general practitioner provided by these apps include gynaecology, dermatology, urology, dentistry, gastroenterology, paediatrics, oncology, sexology, endocrinology, nutrition, physiotherapy, psychiatry, general medicine, surgery, diabetology, pulmonology, cardiology, orthopaedics, and neurology among others (Table 1, Figure 2).
Table 1.
App name and web link | Service provided | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CDO | BDA | BLT | BMO | PHI | PMI | MHR | |
Practo http://bit.ly/2lDVFXF |
✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ |
mfine http://bit.ly/2lwl9Xa |
✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | ✓ |
DocsApp http://bit.ly/2lZvR8N |
✓ | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | ✓ |
1mg http://bit.ly/2k2InDS |
✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - |
Netmeds http://bit.ly/2m0sXkb |
✓ | - | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | - |
Lybrate http://bit.ly/2kuBQSD |
✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | ✓ |
MediBuddy http://bit.ly/2lYsPSe |
✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | - |
Medlife http://bit.ly/2ktWgLn |
✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | ✓ |
Ask Apollo http://bit.ly/2ksBpbi |
✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | ✓ |
India Health Line http://bit.ly/2lxnYHm |
✓ | - | - | ✓ | - | - | - |
Lifecare Health http://bit.ly/2m0tB15 |
✓ | - | ✓ | - | ✓ | - | - |
Visit-Free Chat with a Doctor http://bit.ly/2ki0DcE |
✓ | - | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | - |
I Online Doctor http://bit.ly/2m0v1IX |
✓ | ✓ | - | - | - | ✓ | ✓ |
Ask a Doctor http://bit.ly/2jYtnGX |
✓ | - | - | - | ✓ | - | - |
docOPD http://bit.ly/2ksyv6w |
✓ | - | ✓ | - | - | - | - |
ML Xpress http://bit.ly/2lx4jr4 |
✓ | - | - | ✓ | - | - | - |
CallDoc App http://bit.ly/2k4jgAE |
- | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | - | ✓ |
DOCTOR INSTA http://bit.ly/2kt4e7E |
✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - | - | - |
vHealth by Aetna http://bit.ly/2lvyNd9 |
✓ | - | - | - | - | - | - |
WayuMD http://bit.ly/2lZxG5D |
✓ | - | - | - | - | - | ✓ |
DocOnline http://bit.ly/2kuCOOL |
✓ | ✓ | - | - | - | - | ✓ |
India Dental World http://bit.ly/2lCKqz2 |
✓ | ✓ | - | - | ✓ | - | - |
CDO: consult doctors online, BDA: book doctor’s appointment, BLT: book lab tests, BMO: book medicine online, PHI: provide health information, PMI: provide medicine information, MHR: manage health records.
III. Discussion
1. Challenges in Doctor Consultation through mHealth in India
Although the accessibility of mobile phones and the internet has remarkably increased in the country in the last decade, it is still inaccessible to the bulk of the population. The major reasons are affordability and health literacy. More than one-fifth (21.9%) of the population is still below the poverty line (BPL) [16]. These modern mHealth apps run on smartphones, which are often expensive. For a BPL family, earning a daily livelihood is the major challenge. Buying a smartphone is nothing more than daydreaming for them. On the other hand, existing literature regarding health literacy in India indicates that it is still low in the people of the country [17]. Those who have the financial capacity to buy a smartphone lack health literacy to make full use of these mHealth apps, and health literacy is one of the major determinants of healthcare utilisation in the country [18,19].
2. The Way Forward
Healthcare delivery through a mobile app is a new concept in the healthcare delivery system of India, which is gradually likely be inculcated within it due to its high convenience and potential. In India, there is a very serious lack of healthcare infrastructure and trained health workers, especially in rural and suburban areas. India is home for 1.24 billion people, with about 70% of its people living in remote rural areas without adequate healthcare infrastructure. With merely 3.8% GDP share allocated to healthcare, the Indian government, even after all positive intentions, cannot provide quality healthcare to its rural population overnight [14,20]. The process of healthcare infrastructure building is costly and lengthy. With the continuous growth of the mobile industry and growing teledensity in rural India, a large number of people in rural India have gained access to mobile phones [4]. This leaves us with an excellent opportunity to provide quality healthcare service using the mHealth platform. A healthy rural population is an asset for any nation, especially for countries like India, where the majority of the people live in remote rural areas. Moreover, it is a basic right of every citizen of the country to have good healthcare facilities at affordable rates. Using mHealth app consultations, travelling and time-related costs can be minimized for both users and providers. The platform may be used to raise the health literacy of the people of the country to improve their health-seeking behaviour. On the other hand, most of the doctors and nurses in the country are reluctant to work in rural areas primarily due to low living standards, as well as limited learning opportunities, career growth, and earning opportunities there compared to urban areas [21,22]. The government, with the current spending in healthcare, will take decades to create a traditional health infrastructure to meet the healthcare needs of its people. On the other hand, mHealth only requires awareness, minimal funding, and planning by the government. Thus, gradually, it may evolve as a suitable alternative to reach the person living in the remotest location of the country with quality healthcare at an affordable rate.
To conclude, among the selected mHealth apps providing doctor consultation services online/offline and operating in India, Practo, mfine, DocsApp, 1mg, Netmeds, Lybrate, MediBuddy, and Medlife were found to be the eight most popular ones with over a million downloads and on average four-plus user rating out of five. The government should make enabling policies to facilitate and popularise mHealth applications in the country.
Footnotes
Conflict of Interest
No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.
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