An Analysis of Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusivity, and Accessibility in Crisis mHealth Apps
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59297/sasmmh87Keywords:
mHealth, Crisis, Cultural Responsiveness, Inclusivity, AccessibilityAbstract
Mobile health (mHealth) apps increasingly support crisis response and management, yet their effectiveness across diverse populations remains underexamined. Older adults, people with disabilities, and low-resource communities often face linguistic, technological, and design barriers that limit their ability to benefit fully from crisis-focused mHealth tools. During crises, such barriers risk amplifying existing digital inequities and restricting access to critical health information. This study systematically evaluates crisis-focused mHealth apps in terms of cultural responsiveness, inclusivity, and accessibility. Findings reveal recurring design gaps and inform the Equitable Digital Crisis Infrastructure (EDCI) Framework, which reconceptualizes digital resilience as a function of both operational capacity and inclusiveness, and offers actionable design recommendations to strengthen equitable crisis response.