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Paper Title

Using GPS-enabled cell phones to track the travel patterns of adolescents

Keywords

  • gps tracking
  • adolescent travel patterns
  • health risk behaviors
  • mobile health (mhealth)
  • adolescent health
  • geospatial research
  • surveillance technology
  • behavioral monitoring
  • daily diary data
  • clinic-based research
  • smoking and location tracking
  • ethical research methods
  • health promotion
  • intervention strategies
  • microsocial environments
  • physical environments
  • adolescent mobility
  • location-based data collection
  • public health research
  • future directions in mhealth studies
  • global position system
  • cell phone
  • global position system data
  • exit interview
  • travel pattern

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 7 | Issue : 22 | Page No : 1-11

Published On

May, 2008

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Abstract

Background Few tools exist to directly measure the microsocial and physical environments of adolescents in circumstances where participatory observation is not practical or ethical. Yet measuring these environments is important as they are significantly associated with adolescent health-risk. For example, health-related behaviors such as cigarette smoking often occur in specific places where smoking may be relatively surreptitious. Results We assessed the feasibility of using GPS-enabled cell phones to track adolescent travel patterns and gather daily diary data. We enrolled 15 adolescent women from a clinic-based setting and asked them to carry the phones for 1 week. We found that these phones can accurately and reliably track participant locations, as well as record diary information on adolescent behaviors. Participants had variable paths extending beyond their immediate neighborhoods, and denied that GPS-tracking influenced their activity. Conclusion GPS-enabled cell phones offer a feasible and, in many ways, ideal modality of monitoring the location and travel patterns of adolescents. In addition, cell phones allow space- and time-specific interaction, probing, and intervention which significantly extends both research and health promotion beyond a clinical setting. Future studies can employ GPS-enabled cell phones to better understand adolescent environments, how they are associated with health-risk behaviors, and perhaps intervene to change health behavior.

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