AppsFromResearch
Georgia TB Reference Guide icon

Georgia TB Reference Guide

Evidence Tier:DOCUMENTED

Published in academic literature

For:Clinicians & Healthcare Professionals

App Summary

The Georgia TB Reference Guide is a mobile clinical reference tool for healthcare professionals, providing accessible treatment and control guidelines from organizations including the CDC, WHO, and IDSA. The associated research describes the app's user-centered design process, noting in a follow-up survey that 90% of a pre-selected group of local users preferred the mobile app over the traditional paper guide. The authors conclude that this conversion provides a readily available, easy-to-use, and easy-to-update tool for supporting clinical decision-making in TB care.

App Screenshots

Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 1 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 2 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 3 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 4 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 5 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 6 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 7 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 8 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 9 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 10 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 11 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 12 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 13 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 14 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 15 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 16 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 17 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 18 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 19 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 20 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 21 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 22 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 23 of 24Georgia TB Reference Guide screenshot 24 of 24

Detailed Description

Functionality & Mechanism

Developed by Emory University and the Georgia Department of Public Health, this application digitizes the Georgia TB Reference Guide. The interface facilitates rapid navigation to clinical guidelines for tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis, treatment, and control. Core modules deliver updated recommendations for latent TB infection (LTBI) and active TB disease. The system architecture, informed by a user-centered design process, integrates features such as a prioritized home page, enhanced search functionality, content bookmarking, and annotation capabilities to streamline clinical workflow.

Evidence & Research Context

  • The application's design is based on a formal user-centered methodology that incorporated qualitative interviews and beta testing with tuberculosis clinical experts.
  • In an initial user evaluation, the mobile application was preferred by 90% of participants over the pre-existing paper-based guide.
  • The guide's clinical recommendations are synthesized from standards published by the CDC, American Thoracic Society (ATS), IDSA, and the World Health Organization (WHO).
  • Post-launch analytics from the initial six-month period documented organic adoption by 281 individuals across 20 U.S. states, indicating dissemination beyond its original target region.

Intended Use & Scope

This application is designed for clinicians and public health professionals as an accessible decision-support resource for managing tuberculosis. Its primary utility is to provide a rapid reference framework for established treatment and control guidelines. The tool is not an exhaustive treatise and must not substitute for independent clinical judgment or consultation with primary-source guidelines.

Studies & Publications

1 publication

Peer-reviewed research associated with this app.

Development/Design Paper

'An app is just available at all times"''the process and outcomes of converting the Georgia Tuberculosis Reference Guide into a mobile application

Arconada Alvarez et al. (2024) · PLOS ONE

Describes the research-driven development of this app
Background The physical, paper-based Georgia TB Reference Guide has served as the clinical reference handbook on tuberculosis (TB) diagnostic and treatment guidelines for the state of Georgia in the United States. Supported by the Georgia Department of Public Health, the production of the 112-page palm-sized booklet was previously led by a team of Georgia-based TB experts at Emory University and printed every three-five years with updates to clinical management guidelines and TB consult contact information. However, the costs associated with editorial printing combined with delays in updating a static printed booklet with revised guidance hampered the utility of the tool. Considering the barriers with paper-based production and based on the beneficial use of apps to support the dissemination of clinical management guidance in other settings, the booklet was converted into a mobile application. This paper describes the process of developing a mobile app version of the Georgia TB Reference Guide in an easy-to-update and readily available format. Methods We employed a user-centered design approach to develop the app, including a series of qualitative interviews and quantitative surveys. Participants included a mix of state officials and local TB experts. First, initial foundational interviews were conducted to conceptualize current utilization practices of both the paper and PDF versions of the tool. Second, the findings from the initial interviews were organized thematically and informed the design of the app, which was then beta tested by a round of previously unsampled TB experts as well as a re-sample from the initial interviews. Third, the designs were coded into developmental phases and beta tested among users of the current Georgia TB Reference Guide. Fourth, the app was published and downloaded by a pre-selected group of local users who provided answers to a follow-up survey after using the app for one month. Fifth, user growth, self-reported demographics, and app usage between February and July 2022 were recorded through automatic data metrics built into the app. Results The paper copy Georgia TB Reference Guide usage themes included commonly referenced content, navigation paths, and desired features and content. The themes were converted into features and designs such as prioritizing commonly reviewed topics and guide customization with bookmarks and notes. Iterations of the designs were driven by feedback from TB experts and included home page featured content, improving content readability, and improving the search feature. The follow-up survey revealed a 90% preference for the app over the paper version of the guide. In the six months following the app's release, the app was downloaded by 281 individuals in the United States. The majority of downloads were in Georgia and the app also expanded organically to 19 other states. Conclusion The experience of converting the Georgia TB Reference Guide offers specific and effective steps to converting a medical reference guide into a mobile application tool that is readily available, easy to use, and easy to update. The organic dissemination of the app beyond the state of Georgia's borders within the first six months of app launch underscores desire among TB healthcare professionals for high-quality digital reference content outside the state. This experience offers clear outlines for replication in other contexts and demonstrates the utility of similar mobile medical reference tools.
... Read More

In the Media

TB - Clinicians and Healthcare Providers

The Georgia Department of Public Health developed the Georgia TB Reference Guide app to respond to clinicians' questions about tuberculosis infection, disease, and control, making it available for iOS and Android devices. The app's standards and guidelines are based on the work and experience of the American Thoracic Society, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Infectious Disease Society of America, Emory University, and the World Health Organization. Development of the app was supported by the Georgia Department of Public Health through Contract 40500-046-21203197.

GeorgiaRead article

TB - Clinicians and Healthcare Providers

The Georgia Department of Public Health developed the Georgia TB Reference Guide app for iOS and Android to help clinicians with questions about tuberculosis infection, disease, and control, using standards from leading health organizations. The app incorporates guidelines "based on the work and experience of the American Thoracic Society (ATS), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA), Emory University, and the World Health Organization (WHO)." Development was supported through Georgia Department of Public Health Contract 40500-046-21203197.

GeorgiaRead article

Georgia CTSA's AppHatchery Develops Georgia TB Reference Guide App as an Invaluable Resource for Clinical Care

Georgia Clinical and Translational Science Alliance's AppHatchery developed the Georgia TB Reference Guide app to address clinicians' questions about tuberculosis infection, disease, and control, modernizing TB management through more frequent content updates than traditional printed guides. "The Georgia TB Reference Guide app is an invaluable resource for the clinical care of people with TB. I use it regularly, particularly for the treatment regimens and dosing recommendations for latent TB infection," remarks Daniel Graciaa, MD, MPH, MSc, Assistant Professor at Emory University School of Medicine. The app has already been used by more than 300 healthcare workers in Georgia and nationwide.

GeorgiactsaRead article

Georgia TB Reference Guide

Free