Hi everyone,
At the Change meeting this week, Walter Curioso from Biomedical and Health 
Informatics will be giving a talk entitled mHealth: The opportunity of mobile 
technologies to support HIV adherence in Peru
at noon in CSE 303.  Please the description below.

Before the meeting, from 11:20-12:00 in CSE 303, the ICTD reading group will 
discuss "ICTD State of the Union:  Where have we Reached and Where are we 
Headed."  Joyojeet Pal, one of the authors, will be at the discussion.
http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/590f/09sp/ictd09/

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Speaker: Walter H. Curioso, MD, MPH
PhD student. Biomedical and Health Informatics, School of Medicine, University 
of Washington; Research Professor, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Peru

"mHealth: The opportunity of mobile technologies to support HIV adherence in 
Peru"

There is a mounting interest in the field of mHealth - the provision of 
health-related services via mobile communications. mHealth projects are 
operating in a wide variety of developing countries and providing demonstrable 
impacts. Documented results - in both the developed and developing world - 
reveal that mobile technology improves the efficiency of healthcare delivery. 
Due to its nascent stage, mHealth presents a tremendous opportunity to create a 
global facilitation body, enabling maximum innovation and impact on global 
health.

In this talk, Dr. Curioso will describe and present initial results of 
Cell-POS, a mHealth project that is currently being conducted in Peru. 
Innovative approaches using information technologies such as cell phones are 
needed to increase adherence to antiretroviral treatment for people with 
HIV/AIDS. Cell-POS, funded by the NIH grant R01TW007896, will develop and 
evaluate a computer-based intervention using cell phones to enhance adherence 
to antiretroviral therapy and support of HIV transmission risk-reduction among 
adult HIV- positive patients in Peru. The specific aims of Cell-POS are to: 1) 
Conduct formative research to assess culturally-specific behavioral messages to 
be included in the computer-based system; 2) Develop and test an interactive 
computer-based system using cell phones to enhance adherence to antiretroviral 
treatment and to deliver HIV transmission risk reduction messages; 3) Evaluate 
the impact of the system on antiretroviral adherence and sexual risk behaviors.


Walter H. Curioso is a research professor at the Universidad Peruana Cayetano 
Heredia in Lima, Peru. Dr. Curioso received his MD from Cayetano University, 
his MPH from the University of Washington, and he is currently a PhD student in 
the Department of Biomedical and Health Informatics at the University of 
Washington. He is developing a medical informatics and global health curriculum 
at Cayetano University. His research focus is on how to use technology, 
especially mobile health, to promote global health in developing countries. His 
latest projects, in collaboration with UW faculty, involve using cell phones to 
support HIV antiretroviral adherence, using personal digital assistants to 
assess sexual risk and antiretroviral medication adherence among HIV patients 
in Lima, and using cell phones and the Internet to develop a real-time 
surveillance system for adverse events. He has written more than 75 articles in 
health informatics and information technology, evidence-based medicine, public 
health in developing countries, and clinical medicine. Dr. Curioso can be 
reached at: wcurioso at u.washington.edu and his personal website is available 
at: 
http://faculty.washington.edu/wcurioso/

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