Electronic Personal Health Records for Mobile Populations: A Rapid Systematic Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Rationale
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Study Selection
2.3. Data Extraction
2.4. Grey Literature
2.5. Synthesis of Results
2.6. Ethical Review Statement
2.7. Patient and Public Involvement Statement
3. Results
3.1. Literature
3.1.1. Results from Eligible Peer-Reviewed Publications
3.1.2. Results from Grey Literature
3.2. Initiatives
3.2.1. Main Characteristics of the Tools Identified
Mobile Populations
Countries Covered, Stage of Development, and Number of Users
Languages
Tool Description
Partnerships, Ownership, and Funding
3.2.2. Medical Information and Data Management
Health Data Stored in the Tools
Data Entry
Data Sharing
Data Storage, Security, and Offline Accessibility
3.2.3. User Experiences of the Tools Identified (Including Health-Related Outcomes)
3.2.4. User Engagement in Tool Development
4. Discussion
4.1. Discussion of Key Findings
4.1.1. Centralization of Health Records and Other Functionalities
4.1.2. Different Degrees of Patient Autonomy
4.1.3. User-Adoption Remains a Critical Challenge
4.1.4. Data Security Is a Key Priority for EPHRs Creators and Users
4.2. Implications for Research and Practice
4.3. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. PRISMA Checklist for Systematic Reviews [68]
Section and Topic | Item # | Checklist Item | Location Where Item Is Reported |
---|---|---|---|
TITLE | |||
Title | 1 | Identify the report as a systematic review. | p. 1 |
ABSTRACT | |||
Abstract | 2 | See the PRISMA 2020 for Abstracts checklist. | p. 1 |
INTRODUCTION | |||
Rationale | 3 | Describe the rationale for the review in the context of existing knowledge. | p. 1–4 |
Objectives | 4 | Provide an explicit statement of the objective(s) or question(s) the review addresses. | p. 4 |
METHODS | |||
Eligibility criteria | 5 | Specify the inclusion and exclusion criteria for the review and how studies were grouped for the syntheses. | p. 4 |
Information sources | 6 | Specify all databases, registers, websites, organizations, reference lists, and other sources searched or consulted to identify studies. Specify the date when each source was last searched or consulted. | p. 4 |
Search strategy | 7 | Present the full search strategies for all databases, registers, and websites, including any filters and limits used. | Appendix B |
Selection process | 8 | Specify the methods used to decide whether a study met the inclusion criteria of the review, including how many reviewers screened each record and each report retrieved, whether they worked independently, and if applicable, details of automation tools used in the process. | p. 4 |
Data collection process | 9 | Specify the methods used to collect data from reports, including how many reviewers collected data from each report, whether they worked independently, any processes for obtaining or confirming data from study investigators, and if applicable, details of automation tools used in the process. | p. 4–5 |
Data items | 10a | List and define all outcomes for which data were sought. Specify whether all results that were compatible with each outcome domain in each study were sought (e.g., for all measures, time points, analyses), and if not, the methods used to decide which results to collect. | p. 5 |
10b | List and define all other variables for which data were sought (e.g., participant and intervention characteristics, funding sources). Describe any assumptions made about any missing or unclear information. | p. 5 | |
Study risk of bias assessment | 11 | Specify the methods used to assess risk of bias in the included studies, including details of the tool(s) used, how many reviewers assessed each study and whether they worked independently, and if applicable, details of automation tools used in the process. | p. 5 |
Effect measures | 12 | Specify for each outcome the effect measure(s) (e.g., risk ratio, mean difference) used in the synthesis or presentation of results. | NA |
Synthesis methods | 13a | Describe the processes used to decide which studies were eligible for each synthesis (e.g., tabulating the study intervention characteristics and comparing against the planned groups for each synthesis (item #5)). | p. 5 |
13b | Describe any methods required to prepare the data for presentation or synthesis, such as handling of missing summary statistics, or data conversions. | NA | |
13c | Describe any methods used to tabulate or visually display results of individual studies and syntheses. | NA | |
13d | Describe any methods used to synthesize results and provide a rationale for the choice(s). If meta-analysis was performed, describe the model(s), method(s) to identify the presence and extent of statistical heterogeneity, and software package(s) used. | p. 5 | |
13e | Describe any methods used to explore possible causes of heterogeneity among study results (e.g., subgroup analysis, meta-regression). | NA | |
13f | Describe any sensitivity analyses conducted to assess robustness of the synthesized results. | NA | |
Reporting bias assessment | 14 | Describe any methods used to assess risk of bias due to missing results in a synthesis (arising from reporting biases). | NA |
Certainty assessment | 15 | Describe any methods used to assess certainty (or confidence) in the body of evidence for an outcome. | NA |
RESULTS | |||
Study selection | 16a | Describe the results of the search and selection process, from the number of records identified in the search to the number of studies included in the review, ideally using a flow diagram. | p. 5–16 |
16b | Cite studies that might appear to meet the inclusion criteria, but which were excluded, and explain why they were excluded. | p. | |
Study characteristics | 17 | Cite each included study and present its characteristics. | p. 10 |
Risk of bias in studies | 18 | Present assessments of risk of bias for each included study. | NA |
Results of individual studies | 19 | For all outcomes, present, for each study (a) a summary of the statistics for each group (where appropriate) and (b) an effect estimate and its precision (e.g., confidence/credible interval), ideally using structured tables or plots. | NA |
Results of syntheses | 20a | For each synthesis, briefly summarize the characteristics and risk of bias among contributing studies. | NA |
20b | Present results of all statistical syntheses conducted. If meta-analysis was performed, present for each the summary estimate and its precision (e.g., confidence/credible interval) and measures of statistical heterogeneity. If comparing groups, describe the direction of the effect. | NA | |
20c | Present results of all investigations of possible causes of heterogeneity among study results. | NA | |
20d | Present results of all sensitivity analyses conducted to assess the robustness of the synthesized results. | NA | |
Reporting biases | 21 | Present assessments of risk of bias due to missing results (arising from reporting biases) for each synthesis assessed. | NA |
Certainty of evidence | 22 | Present assessments of certainty (or confidence) in the body of evidence for each outcome assessed. | NA |
DISCUSSION | |||
Discussion | 23a | Provide a general interpretation of the results in the context of other evidence. | p. 16 |
23b | Discuss any limitations of the evidence included in the review. | p. 16–19 | |
23c | Discuss any limitations of the review processes used. | p. 20 | |
23d | Discuss implications of the results for practice, policy, and future research. | p. 19 | |
OTHER INFORMATION | |||
Registration and protocol | 24a | Provide registration information for the review, including register name and registration number, or state that the review was not registered. | p. 4 |
24b | Indicate where the review protocol can be accessed, or state that a protocol was not prepared. | p. 4 | |
24c | Describe and explain any amendments to information provided at registration or in the protocol. | NA | |
Support | 25 | Describe sources of financial or non-financial support for the review, and the role of the funders or sponsors in the review. | p. 21 |
Competing interests | 26 | Declare any competing interests of review authors. | p. 21 |
Availability of data, code and other materials | 27 | Report which of the following are publicly available and where they can be found, including template data collection forms, data extracted from the included studies, data used for all analyses, analytic code, and any other materials used in the review. | NA |
Appendix B. Search Queries Used for Each Database
Pubmed |
---|
((((((((((((((((((((((migrant*[Title/Abstract]) OR (”mobile population*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (refugee*[Title/Abstract])) OR (”asylum seeker*” [Title/Abstract])) OR (”new comer*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (newcomer*[Title/Abstract])) OR (emigrant*[Title/Abstract])) OR (”people on the move”[Title/Abstract]))) OR (”unaccompanied minor*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (”internally displaced*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (”stateless*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (”seasonal worker*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (”temporary foreign worker*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (”international student*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (”medical tourist*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (”expatriate*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (”expat*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (”homeless*”[Title/Abstract])) OR (nomad*[Title/Abstract])) OR (”Emigrants and Immigrants”[Mesh])) OR ((”Refugees”[Mesh]) OR ”Transients and Migrants”[Mesh]) OR (”Medical Tourism”[Mesh]) OR (”Ill-Housed Persons”[Mesh]))AND (((((((((((((((((((((((Electronic Personal Health Record*[Title/Abstract]) OR (Personal Electronic Health Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Digital Personal Health Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Personal Digital Health Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (EPHR[Title/Abstract])) OR (Mobile Personal Health Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Personal Mobile Health Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Digital Patient Held Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Electronic Patient Held Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Mobile Patient Held Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Electronic Personal Medical Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Personal Electronic Medical Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Digital Personal Medical Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Personal Digital Medical Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Mobile Personal Medical Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Personal Mobile Medical Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Mobile health record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Personal Health Platform*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Patient-Controlled Health Record*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Electronic Patient Portal*[Title/Abstract])) OR (Patient Portal*[Title/Abstract]) OR (Telemedicine[Title/Abstract]) OR (eHealth[Title/Abstract]) OR (mHealth[Title/Abstract]) OR (digital health platform[Title/Abstract]) OR (health information system[Title/Abstract]) OR (health information exchange[Title/Abstract])) OR (”Electronic Health Records”[Mesh])) OR (”Telemedicine”[Mesh])) |
Total items: 599 |
Scopus |
---|
(TITLE-ABS-KEY (“Electronic Personal Health Record” OR “Personal Electronic Health Record” OR “Digital Personal Health Record” OR “Personal Digital Health Record” OR “EPHR” OR “Mobile Personal Health Record” OR “Personal Mobile Health Record” OR “Digital Patient Held Record” OR “Electronic Patient Held Record” OR “Mobile Patient Held Record” OR “Electronic Personal Medical Record” OR “Personal Electronic Medical Record” OR “Digital Personal Medical Record” OR “Personal Digital Medical Record” OR “Mobile Personal Medical Record” OR “Personal Mobile Medical Record” OR “Telemedicine” OR “Health information system” OR “Mobile health record” OR “eHealth” OR “mHealth” OR “Personal Health Platform” OR “Health Information Exchange” OR “Patient-Controlled Health Record” OR “Digital Health Platform” OR “Patient Portal”)) AND (TITLE-ABS-KEY (“migrant*” OR “mobile population*” OR “refugee*” OR “asylum seeker” OR “Internally displaced person*” OR “New comer*” OR “Newcomer*” OR “Emigrant*” OR “person on the move” OR “People on the move” OR “Stranded” OR “Unaccompanied minor” OR “Internally displaced*” OR “Stateless person” OR “Seasonal worker*” OR “Temporary Foreign Worker*” OR “International student*” OR “Medical tourist*” OR “Expat*” OR “Homeless*” OR “Nomad*”)) |
Total items: 602 |
Embase |
---|
(‘electronic personal health record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘personal electronic health record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘digital personal health record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘personal digital health record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘ephr’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘mobile personal health record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘personal mobile health record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘patient held record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘electronic patient held record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘mobile patient held record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘electronic personal medical record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘personal electronic medical record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘digital personal medical record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘personal digital medical record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘mobile personal medical record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘personal mobile medical record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘telemedicine’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘health information system’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘mobile health record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘ehealth’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘mhealth’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘personal health platform’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘health information exchange’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘patient-controlled health record’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘digital health platform’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘patient portal’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘telemedicine’/exp OR ‘electronic medical record’/exp OR ‘mhealth’/exp OR ‘telehealth’/exp) AND (‘migrant*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘mobile population*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘refugee*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘asylum seeker’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘internally displaced person*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘new comer*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘newcomer*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘emigrant*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘person on the move’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘people on the move’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘stranded’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘unaccompanied minor’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘internally displaced*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘stateless person’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘seasonal worker*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘temporary foreign worker*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘international student*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘medical tourist*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘expat*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘homeless*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘nomad*’:ab,kw,ti OR ‘statelessness’/exp OR ‘homeless person’/exp OR ‘migrant’/exp OR ‘refugee’/exp OR ‘asylum seeker’/exp OR ‘medical tourism’/exp) |
Total items: 1102 |
Studies Retrieved from Handsearching References |
---|
van de Vijver S, Tensen P, Asiki G, Requena-Méndez A, Heidenrijk M, Stronks K, Cobelens F, Bont J, Agyemang C. Digital health for all: How digital health could reduce inequality and increase universal health coverage. Digit Health. 2023 Jul 7;9:20552076231185434. doi: 10.1177/20552076231185434. |
Total items: 1 |
Grey Literature |
---|
Google Search Engine: 1 Via key experts: 1 Via experiences: 5 |
Total items: 7 |
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No. | Authorship (Year) | Title | Publication | Methodology | EPHR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ballout, G. et al. (2018) [27] | UNRWA’s innovative e-Health for 5 million Palestine refugees in the Near East | Original article | NA | e-MCH Handbook |
2 | Saleh, S. et al. (2019) [28] | Sijilli: a mobile electronic health records system for refugees in low-resource settings | Comment | NA | Sijilli |
3 | Narla, N. et al. (2020) [29] | Agile application of digital health interventions during the COVID-19 refugee response | Viewpoint | Exploratory evaluation | HERA App |
4 | Nasir, S. et al. (2020) [30] | Dissemination and implementation of the e-MCH Handbook, UNRWA’s newly released maternal and child health mobile application: a cross-sectional study | Original article | Cross-sectional study design | e-MCH Handbook |
5 | Saleh, S. et al. (2020) [31] | Sijilli: A scalable model of cloud-based electronic health records for migrating populations in low-resource settings | Viewpoint | NA | Sijilli |
6 | Surmeli, A. et al. (2020) [32] | Leveraging mobile applications in humanitarian crisis to improve health: A case of Syrian women and children refugees in Turkey | Report | NA | HERA App |
7 | Meyer, C. et al. (2022) [33] | Perceptions on a mobile health intervention to improve maternal child health for Syrian refugees in Turkey: Opportunities and challenges for end-user acceptability | Original article | Qualitative study | HERA App |
8 | Shrestha, A. et al. (2022) [34] | Innovation is needed in creating electronic health records for humanitarian crises and displaced populations | Opinion paper | NA | Sijilli |
9 | Vijver, S. et al. (2023) [16] | Digital health for all: How digital health could reduce inequality and increase universal health coverage | Viewpoint | NA | HealthEmove |
10 | Seita, A. et al. (2024) [35] | Leveraging digital health data to transform the United Nations Systems for Palestine refugees for the post pandemic time | Original article | Qualitative study | e-MCH Handbook |
No. | Authorship (Month, Year) | Title | Publication Type | EPHR Tool |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | HealthEmove (n.d.) [36] | Your Personal Health Record | Official website HealthEmove | HealthEmove |
2 | Hera Digital Health (n.d.) [37] | HERA Digital Health | Official website HERA Digital Health | HERA App |
3 | ICRC (n.d.) [38] | RedSafe, a Digital Humanitarian Platform | Official website ICRC | RedSafe |
4 | ICRC (February, 2022) [39] | Fourth RedSafe kiosk opens in Zimbabwe | News release on the official website ICRC | RedSafe |
5 | JICA (August, 2017) [40] | Jordan: UNRWA’s electronic MCH handbook application for Palestine refugees (Issue 20) | Technical brief | e-MCH Handbook |
6 | My Personal Health Bank (n.d.) [41] | My Personal Health Bank | Official website of My Personal Health Bank | My Personal Health Bank |
7 | My Personal Health Bank (n.d.) [42] | Usage statistics | LinkedIn post | My Personal Health Bank |
8 | MIT-solve (August, 2022) [43] | Novel measurement for performance improvement challenge My Personal Health Bank | Application MIT-solve | My Personal Health Bank |
9 | Play Store (May, 2024) [44] | Play Store: RedSafe | App download | RedSafe |
Tool Name | Initiated/Owned by | Mobile Population | Current Countries | Stage of Development | Number of Users (Month, Year) a | Languages | Tool Description | Application Type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tools from the scientific literature | ||||||||
e-MCH Handbook | UNRWA and JICA # | Palestine refugees # | Jordan, Gaza, Lebanon, Westbank, Syria # | Application since 2017 # | 254,586 registered users (July 2023) and 22,000 active users (June 2023) # | Arabic # | mHealth application with PHR | Smartphone app # |
HERA App | HERA Digital Health & | Syrian refugees # | Turkey # | Application since 2018. In 2020 field tests were performed # | >3000 refugee families in Turkish pilot study (n.d.) & | Arabic, Turkish, English #, Pashto and Dari & | Humanitarian platform with ‘digital vault’ | Smartphone and web-app # |
Sijilli | American University of Beirut and Epic Health Systems # | Syrian refugees # | Lebanon # | Launched 2018 # | >10,000 users (2022) # | English and Arabic # | EHR with user-portal and USB-stick | NA |
HealthEmove | Initiative: Amsterdam Health & Technology Institute; software: Patients Know Best 5.0.18 & | Refugees # and People on the move & | Netherlands & | Application since 2023 # | NA | 22 languages & | EPHR | Web-app & |
Tools from the grey literature | ||||||||
My personal Health Bank | University of Southern Denmark, University of Dodoma and Muhimbili University & | People in developing countries and people on the move & | Tanzania & | Feasibility study from June 2022 until February 2023 | 4969 patients included (June 2022) & (31) a | English, Kiswahili & | EPHR | Web-app & |
RedSafe | International Committee of the Red Cross & | People affected by conflict, migration and other humanitarian crisis & | Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador, Mexico, USA, Costa Rica, Panama, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Botswana, Malawi, Mozambique, Eswatini, Lesotho, Switzerland, Zambia *,& | Launched in May 2021 & | 32,000 downloads (February 2022) & | English, Spanish and Portuguese & | Humanitarian platform with ‘digital vault’ | Smartphone and web-app & |
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Tensen, P.; Gaifém, F.; Paul, S.K.; Wekesah, F.M.; Acheampong, P.R.; Nikolajsen, M.B.; Kirk, U.B.; Owusu-Dabo, E.; Kallestrup, P.; Agyemang, C.; et al. Electronic Personal Health Records for Mobile Populations: A Rapid Systematic Literature Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22, 488. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22040488
Tensen P, Gaifém F, Paul SK, Wekesah FM, Acheampong PR, Nikolajsen MB, Kirk UB, Owusu-Dabo E, Kallestrup P, Agyemang C, et al. Electronic Personal Health Records for Mobile Populations: A Rapid Systematic Literature Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2025; 22(4):488. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22040488
Chicago/Turabian StyleTensen, Paulien, Francisca Gaifém, Simeon Kintu Paul, Frederick Murunga Wekesah, Princess Ruhama Acheampong, Maria Bach Nikolajsen, Ulrik Bak Kirk, Ellis Owusu-Dabo, Per Kallestrup, Charles Agyemang, and et al. 2025. "Electronic Personal Health Records for Mobile Populations: A Rapid Systematic Literature Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 22, no. 4: 488. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22040488
APA StyleTensen, P., Gaifém, F., Paul, S. K., Wekesah, F. M., Acheampong, P. R., Nikolajsen, M. B., Kirk, U. B., Owusu-Dabo, E., Kallestrup, P., Agyemang, C., & van de Vijver, S. (2025). Electronic Personal Health Records for Mobile Populations: A Rapid Systematic Literature Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 22(4), 488. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22040488