
In an editorial in the November 2017 issue of the American Journal of Public Health (AJPH), Nicholas Freudenberg, Distinguished Professor of Public Health at the CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy (CUNY SPH), asks whether mobile health applications (mHealth Apps) can help to solve such pressing public health problems as increasing access to care, reducing inequalities in health, lowering health care costs and providing people with new tools to manage chronic diseases and reduce risky behavior.
An article in the same AJPH issue, “A Social Network Analysis of the Financial Links Backing Health and Fitness Apps,” notes that the global pharmaceutical, tech, and fashion corporations are increasingly developing and marketing mHealth apps.
Commenting on the latter article, Freudenberg notes that in their effort to maintain profitability in a crowded marketplace, these corporations may make misleading claims, cover up defects or market unscrupulously, thus harming rather than helping users.



