Babatunde Abdulhammed Opeyemi, Ayede Adejumoke Idowu, Colangelo Amalia, Nguyen Tuan Dung, Aborode Abdullahi Tunde, Umeh Charles, Hernandez Maria Paula, Ayede Oluwaseyi Iyanuoluwa, Ayede Oluwatobiloba Oluwadunni
College of Medicine, University of Ibadan and University College Hospital, Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria.
MyBelle Digital Maternal and Child Health Organisation, Ibadan, Nigeria.
Front Public Health. 2025 Jan 22;12:1368631. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1368631. eCollection 2024.
Nigeria accounts for 20% of all maternal mortality. Recently, more mobile health technology (mHealth) interventions are emerging in sub-Saharan Africa. The potential of mobile applications in maternal care has not been explored in Nigeria. This study describes the process of design, development, and testing of an educational and monitoring mobile application for pregnant women in Nigeria.
Using a user-centered design, we conducted semi-structured interviews at each stage of mobile application development with pregnant women attending antenatal clinics in Oyo State, Nigeria. The first interview focused on empathy, followed by alpha and beta testing of the mobile application prototype at health facilities.
The barriers to accessing perinatal care were the distance to the nearest facility (mean = 3.3 km), lack of perinatal education, and cost. The low-fidelity prototype of the mobile application was designed with five features. Mobile applications increased the level of knowledge of preeclampsia by 179%. User feedback from alpha testing informed the development of a high-fidelity prototype for beta testing. Ninety-five percent (95%) of pregnant women surveyed were willing to download the mobile application. The final application developed was uploaded to the Google Play Store (MyBelle pregnancy application).
mHealth applications have the potential to increase access to prenatal information and services in Nigeria and may reduce maternal and childhood mortality. This study has described the process of development of the first indigenous mobile application specifically for pregnant women in Nigeria using a user-centered design thinking approach.
尼日利亚的孕产妇死亡率占全球的20%。最近,撒哈拉以南非洲地区出现了更多移动健康技术(mHealth)干预措施。在尼日利亚,移动应用在孕产妇护理中的潜力尚未得到探索。本研究描述了一款针对尼日利亚孕妇的教育和监测移动应用的设计、开发和测试过程。
采用以用户为中心的设计方法,在移动应用开发的每个阶段,我们对尼日利亚奥约州产前诊所的孕妇进行了半结构化访谈。第一次访谈侧重于同理心,随后在医疗机构对移动应用原型进行了alpha和beta测试。
获得围产期护理的障碍包括到最近医疗机构的距离(平均=3.3公里)、缺乏围产期教育和费用。移动应用的低保真原型设计了五个功能。移动应用使子痫前期的知识水平提高了179%。alpha测试的用户反馈为beta测试的高保真原型开发提供了依据。95%接受调查的孕妇愿意下载该移动应用。最终开发的应用程序上传到了谷歌应用商店(MyBelle孕期应用)。
移动健康应用有潜力增加尼日利亚产前信息和服务的获取,并可能降低孕产妇和儿童死亡率。本研究描述了使用以用户为中心的设计思维方法,专门为尼日利亚孕妇开发首个本土移动应用的过程。