Munro Sarah, Hui Amber, Salmons Vanessa, Solomon Carolyn, Gemmell Emily, Torabi Nahal, Janssen Patricia A
Department of Family Practice, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, United States.
JMIR Public Health Surveill. 2017 Feb 7;3(1):e7. doi: 10.2196/publichealth.6949.
We engaged Canadian women in the development of a prenatal education program delivered via one-way text messaging called SmartMom. SmartMom is the first peer-reviewed, evidence-based mHealth program for prenatal education in Canada and the first to be endorsed by the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada.
To explore women's preferences for a prenatal education program by text messaging.
We conducted a qualitative focus group study in three Canadian communities in the Northern Health Authority. Women completed a demographic questionnaire, participated in a guided discussion about their pregnancy information-seeking behavior, reviewed a printed copy of the SmartMom text messages, and then engaged in a moderated discussion about their perceptions of the usability of the SmartMom program. Open-ended questions explored women's perceptions regarding the message content, acceptability of receiving information by text message, positive health behaviors they might engage in after receiving a message, modifiable program factors, and intention to use the program. Thematic analysis of transcribed audio recordings was undertaken and modifications were made to the SmartMom program based on these findings.
A total of 40 women participated in seven focus groups in three rural northern communities. The vast majority had a mobile phone (39/40, 98%), used text messages "all the time" (28/40, 70%), and surfed the Internet on their phone (37/40, 93%). Participants perceived SmartMom to be highly acceptable and relevant. The text message modality reflected how participants currently sought pregnancy-related information and provided them with local information tailored to their gestational age, which they had not received through other pregnancy resources. Women recommended adding the opportunity to receive supplemental streams of messages tailored to their individual needs, for example, depression, pregnancy after previous cesarean, >35 years of age, new immigrants, and harm reduction for smoking and alcohol.
This formative qualitative evaluation provides evidence that a prenatal education program by text messaging, SmartMom, is acceptable to the end users. These findings support the usability of the SmartMom program at a population level and the development of an evaluation program exploring the effects of the text messages on adoption of health-promoting behaviors and maternal-child health outcomes.
我们邀请加拿大女性参与了一个通过单向短信提供的产前教育项目“智能妈妈”的开发。“智能妈妈”是加拿大首个经过同行评审、基于证据的用于产前教育的移动健康项目,也是首个获得加拿大妇产科学会认可的此类项目。
通过短信来探索女性对产前教育项目的偏好。
我们在北方卫生局的三个加拿大社区开展了一项定性焦点小组研究。女性们填写了一份人口统计学调查问卷,参与了一场关于她们孕期信息寻求行为的引导式讨论,查看了“智能妈妈”短信的打印版,然后参与了一场关于她们对“智能妈妈”项目可用性看法的主持讨论。开放式问题探讨了女性对信息内容的看法、通过短信接收信息的可接受性、收到信息后她们可能会采取的积极健康行为以及可修改的项目因素,还有使用该项目的意愿。对转录的音频记录进行了主题分析,并根据这些结果对“智能妈妈”项目进行了修改。
共有40名女性参与了北方三个农村社区的七个焦点小组。绝大多数人有手机(39/40,98%),“一直”使用短信(28/40,70%),并且用手机上网(37/40,93%)。参与者认为“智能妈妈”非常可接受且相关。短信形式反映了参与者当前寻求孕期相关信息的方式,并为她们提供了根据其孕周量身定制的本地信息,这是她们通过其他孕期资源未曾获得的。女性们建议增加机会,以接收根据她们的个人需求定制的补充短信流,例如,针对抑郁症、前次剖宫产术后妊娠、35岁以上、新移民以及减少吸烟和饮酒危害等情况。
这项形成性定性评估提供了证据,表明通过短信开展的产前教育项目“智能妈妈”为最终用户所接受。这些结果支持了“智能妈妈”项目在人群层面的可用性,以及一个探索短信对促进健康行为的采用和母婴健康结局影响的评估项目的开展。