Digital Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Scaling and Effectiveness of Technology-Enabled Interventions: What technology-enabled adolescent SRH behavior change interventions have been scaled in LMICs, and what evidence exists regarding their effectiveness?
- Adolescents’ Preferences for Digital Program Delivery: What does the literature reveal about adolescents’ preferences and engagement with digital SRH programs?
- Investment and Development of Digital SRH Interventions: What insights can be gained regarding the level and types of investments organizations make to develop and deliver digital adolescent SRH behavior change interventions?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Search Strategy and Inclusion Criteria
- Types of Evaluations: We included studies featuring process evaluations, quasi-experimental and experimental evaluations, as well as cost or cost-effectiveness evaluations.
- Case Studies: Case studies were included if they provided substantial qualitative or quantitative information to answer the research questions.
- Literature Types: Both peer-reviewed and non-peer-reviewed literature, such as reports and briefs, were considered.
- Study Designs: Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-methods studies were included to ensure a comprehensive understanding of the topic.
- Publication Date: Only studies published from 2010 to 2023 were included to reflect the most recent developments in technology and SRH.
- Geographic Scope: The focus was on interventions conducted in LMICs as classified by the World Bank (World Bank Open Data, n.d.).
- Participant Age Range: Studies involving participants aged 10–24 years were included to cover the adolescent and young adult population.
- Intervention Type: We included technology-enabled interventions utilizing cell phones, computers, and tablets but excluded those relying on mass media communications such as radio or television.
- Language: Only English-language papers were included to maintain consistency in data interpretation.
- Exclusions: Protocol papers (those outlining research plans without results), dissertations, and theses were excluded.
2.2. Search Keywords and Databases
- Age Range Keywords: Adolescent, Youth, Teen, Young Adult.
- Topic Keywords: Sexual and Reproductive Health, Family Planning, Contraception, Sexually Transmitted Disease, STD, SRH, HIV, AIDS, Health Education, Health Information, Female Genital Mutilation, FGM, Female Circumcision.
- Location Keywords: Developing Country, Global South, Third World, Less Developed Country, Low Income Country, Middle Income Country, Brazil, Guinea, India, Africa, Latin America, South America, Central America, Pakistan, Southeast Asia, China.
- Technology Keywords: Technology, Cell Phone, Cellular, Tablet, Computer, Online, mHealth.
2.3. Study Selection and Screening Process
- Title and Abstract Screening: Titles and abstracts were reviewed for relevance based on the inclusion criteria. Studies that did not meet the criteria were excluded.
- Full-Text Review: Full texts of the remaining papers were thoroughly reviewed to confirm eligibility. Studies that failed to meet the inclusion criteria upon full-text review were excluded.
- Data Extraction: Relevant data were systematically extracted from the included studies, focusing on study design, intervention details, outcomes, and key findings.
2.4. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Types of Studies Analyzed
3.2. Types of Interventions Analyzed
3.3. Effectiveness (Research Question One)
3.4. Adolescent Preferences (Research Question Two)
3.5. Types of Investments (Research Question Three)
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Type of Impact | Finding | Citations | Number of Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Knowledge Outcomes | |||
Knowledge of SRH | Significantly improved | See: (Feroz et al., 2021; Hernández-Torres et al., 2022; Hu et al., 2023; Nuwamanya et al., 2020; Palmer et al., 2020; Sharma et al., 2022) | 6 |
Knowledge of SRH | Mixed: 2 of 17 HIV knowledge items improved | See: (Ivanova et al., 2019) | 13 |
Knowledge of SRH | No significant change | See: (Jamison et al., 2013; Winskell et al., 2019) | 2 |
Access to contraceptive information | Significantly improved | See: (Feroz et al., 2021) | 1 |
Knowledge of contraception | Significantly improved | See: (Riley, 2014) | 1 |
Knowledge of contraception | No significant change | See: (Gichangi et al., 2022) | 1 |
Health Behaviors | |||
Risky sexual behavior | Significantly reduced | See: (Hernández-Torres et al., 2022) | 1 |
Risky sexual behavior | No significant change | See: (Hu et al., 2023; Jamison et al., 2013; Lopez et al., 2014) | 3 |
Condom use | Significantly increased | See: (Nuwamanya et al., 2020) | 1 |
Condom use | No significant change | See: (Brody et al., 2022; Ybarra et al., 2013) | 2 |
Contraceptive use | Significantly increased | See: (Nuwamanya et al., 2020; Palmer et al., 2020; Smith et al., 2015; Unger et al., 2018) | 4 |
Contraceptive use | No significant change | See: (Riley, 2014) | 1 |
Health Services | |||
Completed referral to sexual or reproductive health or HIV appointment | Significantly increased | See: (Dhakwa et al., 2021) | 1 |
HIV testing | Significantly increased | See: (Nuwamanya et al., 2020) | 1 |
HIV testing | No significant change | See: (Brody et al., 2022) | 1 |
Adherence to HIV treatment | Significantly increased | See: (Hacking et al., 2019) | 1 |
Adherence to HIV treatment | Mixed: significantly increased 2 of 6 studied reviewed; others found no significant increase | See: (Griffee et al., 2022) | 1 |
Adherence to HIV treatment | No significant change | See: (Goldstein et al., 2023; Ivanova et al., 2019; MacCarthy et al., 2020) | 3 |
Facility births | Significantly increased | See: (Thompson et al., 2019) | 1 |
Health Outcomes | |||
HIV viral load suppression | No significant increase | See: (Hacking et al., 2019; Venter et al., 2019) | 2 |
Pregnancy rates | No significant change | See: (Meherali et al., 2021; Smith et al., 2015) | 2 |
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Dowling, R.; Howell, E.M.; Dasco, M.A.; Schwartzman, J. Digital Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Scoping Review. Youth 2025, 5, 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5010015
Dowling R, Howell EM, Dasco MA, Schwartzman J. Digital Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Scoping Review. Youth. 2025; 5(1):15. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5010015
Chicago/Turabian StyleDowling, Russell, Embry M. Howell, Mark Anthony Dasco, and Jason Schwartzman. 2025. "Digital Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Scoping Review" Youth 5, no. 1: 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5010015
APA StyleDowling, R., Howell, E. M., Dasco, M. A., & Schwartzman, J. (2025). Digital Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Scoping Review. Youth, 5(1), 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5010015