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一项旨在改善印度北部产后健康状况的移动教育与社会支持小组干预措施:开发与可用性研究。

A Mobile Education and Social Support Group Intervention for Improving Postpartum Health in Northern India: Development and Usability Study.

作者信息

El Ayadi Alison M, Duggal Mona, Bagga Rashmi, Singh Pushpendra, Kumar Vijay, Ahuja Alka, Kankaria Ankita, Hosapatna Basavarajappa Darshan, Kaur Jasmeet, Sharma Preetika, Gupta Swati, Pendse Ruchita S, Weil Laura, Swendeman Dallas, Diamond-Smith Nadia G

机构信息

Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.

Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.

出版信息

JMIR Form Res. 2022 Jun 29;6(6):e34087. doi: 10.2196/34087.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Structural and cultural barriers limit Indian women's access to adequate postnatal care and support despite their importance for maternal and neonatal health. Targeted postnatal education and support through a mobile health intervention may improve postnatal recovery, neonatal care practices, nutritional status, knowledge and care seeking, and mental health.

OBJECTIVE

We sought to understand the feasibility and acceptability of our first pilot phase, a flexible 6-week postnatal mobile health intervention delivered to 3 groups of women in Punjab, India, and adapt our intervention for our next pilot phase, which will formally assess intervention feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy.

METHODS

Our intervention prototype was designed to deliver culturally tailored educational programming via a provider-moderated, voice- and text-based group approach to connect new mothers with a social support group of other new mothers, increase their health-related communication with providers, and refer them to care needed. We targeted deployment using feature phones to include participants from diverse socioeconomic groups. We held moderated group calls weekly, disseminated educational audios, and created SMS text messaging groups. We varied content delivery, group discussion participation, and chat moderation. Three groups of postpartum women from Punjab were recruited for the pilot through community health workers. Sociodemographic data were collected at baseline. Intervention feasibility and acceptability were assessed through weekly participant check-ins (N=29), weekly moderator reports, structured end-line in-depth interviews among a subgroup of participants (15/29, 52%), and back-end technology data.

RESULTS

The participants were aged 24 to 28 years and 1 to 3 months postpartum. Of the 29 participants, 17 (59%) had their own phones. Half of the participants (14/29, 48%) attended ≥3 of the 6 calls; the main barriers were childcare and household responsibilities and network or phone issues. Most participants were very satisfied with the intervention (16/19, 84%) and found the educational content (20/20, 100%) and group discussions (17/20, 85%) very useful. The participants used the SMS text messaging chat, particularly when facilitator-moderated. Sustaining participation and fostering group interactions was limited by technological and sociocultural challenges.

CONCLUSIONS

The intervention was considered generally feasible and acceptable, and protocol adjustments were identified to improve intervention delivery and engagement. To address technological issues, we engaged a cloud-based service provider for group calls and an interactive voice response service provider for educational recordings and developed a smartphone app for the participants. We seek to overcome sociocultural challenges through new strategies for increasing group engagement, including targeting midlevel female community health care providers as moderators. Our second pilot will assess intervention feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness at 6 months. Ultimately, we seek to support the health and well-being of postpartum women and their infants in South Asia and beyond through the development of efficient, acceptable, and effective intervention strategies.

摘要

背景

尽管产后护理和支持对孕产妇及新生儿健康至关重要,但结构和文化障碍限制了印度女性获得足够的产后护理和支持。通过移动健康干预提供有针对性的产后教育和支持,可能会改善产后恢复、新生儿护理实践、营养状况、知识水平、寻求护理的行为以及心理健康。

目的

我们试图了解第一阶段试点的可行性和可接受性,这是一项为期6周的灵活产后移动健康干预措施,针对印度旁遮普邦的3组女性实施,并为下一阶段试点调整我们的干预措施,下一阶段将正式评估干预的可行性、可接受性和初步效果。

方法

我们的干预原型旨在通过提供者主持的、基于语音和文本的小组方式,提供符合文化背景的教育课程,将新妈妈与其他新妈妈组成的社会支持小组联系起来,增加她们与提供者的健康相关沟通,并为她们转介所需的护理。我们使用功能手机进行部署,以纳入不同社会经济群体的参与者。我们每周举行主持的小组通话,分发教育音频,并创建短信聊天群组。我们改变了内容传递、小组讨论参与度和聊天主持方式。通过社区卫生工作者招募了旁遮普邦的三组产后女性参与试点。在基线时收集社会人口统计学数据。通过每周的参与者签到(N = 29)、每周的主持人报告、一部分参与者(15/29,52%)的结构化终期深入访谈以及后端技术数据,评估干预的可行性和可接受性。

结果

参与者年龄在24至28岁之间,产后1至3个月。29名参与者中,17名(59%)有自己的手机。一半的参与者(14/29,48%)参加了6次通话中的≥3次;主要障碍是育儿和家务责任以及网络或电话问题。大多数参与者对干预非常满意(16/19,84%),并认为教育内容(20/20,100%)和小组讨论(17/20,85%)非常有用。参与者使用短信聊天,特别是在主持人主持时。技术和社会文化挑战限制了持续参与和促进小组互动。

结论

该干预措施总体上被认为是可行和可接受的,并确定了方案调整以改善干预的实施和参与度。为了解决技术问题,我们聘请了一家基于云的服务提供商进行小组通话,一家交互式语音响应服务提供商进行教育录音,并为参与者开发了一款智能手机应用程序。我们试图通过增加小组参与度的新策略来克服社会文化挑战,包括将中级女性社区卫生保健提供者作为主持人。我们的第二个试点将在6个月时评估干预的可行性、可接受性和初步有效性。最终,我们试图通过开发高效、可接受和有效的干预策略,支持南亚及其他地区产后女性及其婴儿的健康和福祉。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/9fbb/9280461/94452425ed09/formative_v6i6e34087_fig1.jpg

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