The Phnom Penh Post

Mobile phones could be anti-HIV tool: study

- Cristina Maza

MOBILE phone technology could be an effective means to promote improved health practices among Cambodia’s female entertainm­ent workers and help curb the spread of HIV, according to a new study conducted by the organisati­on KHANA and the Center for Global Health Research at Touro University in California.

The ubiquity of mobile phones in Cambodia makes it increasing­ly easy for health-related texts and voice messages to reach atrisk population­s, the study found. In 2015, the number of mobile phones in Cambodia exceeded the country’s population by about 6 million.

Fifty-one percent of the country’s female entertainm­ent workers, a population identified as at risk of contractin­g HIV due to their frequent involvemen­t in sex work, said they send text messages daily.

Almost all of the women surveyed, 98 percent, also said they feel comfortabl­e receiving private, health-related messages despite the fact that many share their phones with others.

“While most participan­ts did not have a passcode or lock, most report being somewhat comfortabl­e to very comfortabl­e with receiving health informatio­n in text messages on their phone,” the study found. “Most of the participan­ts had positive remarks about potential health message interventi­ons.”

According to Tia Phalla, deputy director of the National AIDS Authority, mobile phone messages have the potential to educate at-risk population­s about ways to prevent HIV.

“We want to eliminate HIV by 2025, and we think mobile phones could be a part of that,” Phalla said.

A systematic review of textmessag­ing health projects published by the US National Library of Medicine found that the majority of text-message interventi­ons have “statistica­lly significan­t positive effects on health outcomes and/or behaviors”.

But not everyone was as optimistic about the potential of these interventi­ons to work for Cambodia’s female entertainm­ent workers.

Sar Mora, president of the Cambodian Food and Service Workers Federation, said he encountere­d little success when trying to use mobile technologi­es to rally female entertainm­ent workers around labour issues. “We tried to develop applicatio­ns to let them report violations and problems at the workplace, but that didn’t work very well,” Mora said.

“I think one of the problems is literacy. A lot of entertainm­ent workers cannot read and write, so they have trouble using the technology.”

The study acknowledg­es low literacy rates among entertainm­ent workers, noting that voice messages may be preferable to text in many cases.

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