Singh Khushbu, Walters Matthew R
College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom.
School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom.
PLOS Digit Health. 2024 Feb 2;3(2):e0000403. doi: 10.1371/journal.pdig.0000403. eCollection 2024 Feb.
Low-middle income countries like India bear a heavier burden of maternal, childcare, and child mortality rates when compared with high-income countries, which highlights the disparity in global health. Numerous societal, geopolitical, economic, and institutional issues have been linked to this inequality. mHealth has the potential to ameliorate these challenges by providing health services and health-related information with the assistance of frontline workers in the provision of prepartum, delivery, and postnatal care to improve maternal and child health outcomes in hard-to-reach areas in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). However, there is limited evidence to support how mHealth can strengthen maternal and child health in India. The scoping review guideline in the Cochrane Handbook was used to retrieve studies from 4 international databases: CINAHL, Embase, Medline Ovid, and PubMed. This search strategy used combined keywords (MeSH terms) related to maternal and child healthcare, mHealth, and BIMARU in conjunction with database-controlled vocabulary. Out of 278 records, 8 publications were included in the review. The included articles used mHealth for data collection, eLearning, communication, patient monitoring, or tracking to deliver maternal and neonatal care. The results of these papers reflected a favourable effect of mHealth on the target population and found that it altered their attitudes and behaviours about healthcare. Higher job satisfaction and self-efficiency were reported by mHealth user care providers. Multiple barriers to the acceptance of mHealth exist, but the majority of the evidence points towards the feasibility of the intervention in a clinical setting. The mHealth has positive potential for improving maternal and child health outcomes in low-resource settings in India's BIMARU states by strengthening the healthcare system. The results of the study could be used in the tailoring of an effective mHealth intervention and implementation strategy in a similar context. However, there is a need for economic evaluation in the future to bridge the knowledge gap regarding the cost-effectiveness of mHealth interventions.
与高收入国家相比,像印度这样的中低收入国家承受着更重的孕产妇、儿童护理及儿童死亡率负担,这凸显了全球健康方面的差距。众多社会、地缘政治、经济和制度问题都与这种不平等现象相关联。移动健康(mHealth)有潜力通过在一线工作人员协助下提供健康服务和健康相关信息,来改善这些挑战,从而在中低收入国家(LMICs)难以到达的地区提供产前、分娩和产后护理,以改善孕产妇和儿童健康状况。然而,支持移动健康如何加强印度孕产妇和儿童健康的证据有限。本研究使用了Cochrane手册中的范围综述指南,从4个国际数据库检索研究:CINAHL、Embase、Medline Ovid和PubMed。该检索策略使用了与孕产妇和儿童保健、移动健康以及印度比哈尔邦、中央邦、拉贾斯坦邦和北方邦(BIMARU)相关的组合关键词(医学主题词),并结合数据库控制词汇。在278条记录中,8篇出版物被纳入综述。纳入的文章使用移动健康进行数据收集、电子学习、沟通、患者监测或追踪,以提供孕产妇和新生儿护理。这些论文的结果反映了移动健康对目标人群的有利影响,并发现它改变了他们对医疗保健的态度和行为。移动健康用户护理提供者报告了更高的工作满意度和自我效能感。虽然存在多种阻碍移动健康被接受的因素,但大多数证据表明该干预措施在临床环境中具有可行性。移动健康通过加强医疗系统,在印度BIMARU邦的低资源环境中改善孕产妇和儿童健康状况具有积极潜力。该研究结果可用于在类似背景下制定有效的移动健康干预措施和实施策略。然而,未来需要进行经济评估,以弥补关于移动健康干预措施成本效益方面的知识差距。