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用于改变本土母婴健康相关行为的移动健康干预措施:系统评价

Mobile Health Interventions for Modifying Indigenous Maternal and Child-Health Related Behaviors: Systematic Review.

作者信息

Ishaque Sana, Ela Ola, Dowling Anna, Rissel Chris, Canuto Karla, Hall Kerry, Bidargaddi Niranjan, Briley Annette, Roberts Claire T, Bonevski Billie

机构信息

Flinders University, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute, Bedford Park, Australia.

First Peoples Health Unit, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia.

出版信息

J Med Internet Res. 2025 Apr 30;27:e57019. doi: 10.2196/57019.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Mobile health (mHealth) interventions promoting healthy lifestyle changes offer an adaptable and inexpensive method for accessing health information but require cultural appropriateness and suitability for acceptance and effectiveness in Indigenous populations. No systematic review on effective mHealth interventions for Indigenous women during pregnancy and the early childhood years has been conducted.

OBJECTIVE

This review evaluated the effectiveness of mHealth interventions promoting healthy behaviors for Indigenous mothers and children from conception to 5 years post partum. It also aimed to explore the observed effectiveness differences based on participant engagement, intervention design, and provision of context. Further, the review explored if the interventions were co-designed.

METHODS

A systematic search of 5 databases was conducted: SCOPUS, MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and ProQuest (Dissertation or Thesis). Studies were included if they were either a randomized controlled trial, pre-post comparison, or a cohort study using mHealth with Indigenous women for maternal and child health following a preregistered PROSPERO protocol (CRD42023395710). HealthInfoNet was searched for gray literature and the reference lists of included studies were hand searched. The initial title and abstract screen for eligibility were performed by 1 reviewer. A full-text screen of eligible studies and a quality appraisal of included studies was performed by 2 reviewers independently. The appraisal tools used were the Mixed Methods Quality Appraisal Tool and the Centre of Excellence in Aboriginal Chronic Disease Knowledge Translation and Exchange (CREATE). A descriptive synthesis of the extracted data was performed.

RESULTS

Of the 663 articles screened, only 3 met the eligibility criteria. Each paper evaluated a different mHealth intervention: Remote Prenatal Education; the SMS Parent Action Intervention (two-way text messaging); and the Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) eCHECKUP To Go (web-based screening and intervention). Statistically significant changes were reported in some outcomes, including an increase in the parental participation rate in face-to-face prenatal education; increased rate of breastfeeding initiation and exclusive breastfeeding (2-12 months); improved overall children's behavior related to sleep, diet, physical activity, screen time, and intake of sugary beverages; improved individual children's behavior related to physical activity and sleep; and decrease in alcohol drinks per week and binge drinking episodes per 2 weeks due to time effect. However, no study provided a sample size calculation for the reported significant outcomes. Also, due to the small number of included studies and each study evaluating a different intervention, it was not possible to combine results to ascertain if the participant engagement, intervention design, or community context had any impact on the effectiveness.

CONCLUSIONS

Due to the lack of sample size calculation, it was not possible to establish whether differences in the effectiveness were due to the interventions or a type I statistical error. Therefore, caution is required in the interpretation of these findings.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

PROSPERO CRD42023395710; https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/view/CRD42023395710.

摘要

背景

促进健康生活方式改变的移动健康(mHealth)干预措施提供了一种获取健康信息的适应性强且成本低廉的方法,但需要在文化上具有适宜性,并且要适合原住民群体接受并发挥效用。目前尚未对针对原住民妇女孕期及幼儿期的有效移动健康干预措施进行系统综述。

目的

本综述评估了促进原住民母亲及其子女从受孕到产后5年健康行为的移动健康干预措施的有效性。还旨在探讨基于参与者参与度、干预设计和背景情况所观察到的有效性差异。此外,该综述还探讨了这些干预措施是否为共同设计。

方法

对5个数据库进行了系统检索:Scopus、MEDLINE、CINAHL、PsycINFO和ProQuest(学位论文)。如果研究是随机对照试验、前后比较研究或队列研究,且使用移动健康技术针对原住民妇女进行母婴健康研究,并遵循预先注册的PROSPERO方案(CRD42023395710),则纳入研究。检索了HealthInfoNet以获取灰色文献,并对纳入研究的参考文献列表进行了手工检索。由1名评审员对初始标题和摘要进行资格筛选。由2名评审员独立对符合条件的研究进行全文筛选和纳入研究的质量评估。使用的评估工具是混合方法质量评估工具和原住民慢性病知识转化与交流卓越中心(CREATE)。对提取的数据进行了描述性综合分析。

结果

在筛选的663篇文章中,只有3篇符合资格标准。每篇论文评估了一种不同的移动健康干预措施:远程产前教育;短信家长行动干预(双向短信);以及筛查、简短干预和转介治疗(SBIRT)电子健康检查(基于网络的筛查和干预)。报告了一些结果在统计学上有显著变化,包括面对面产前教育中父母参与率的提高;母乳喂养开始率和纯母乳喂养率(2至12个月)的提高;与睡眠、饮食、身体活动、屏幕时间和含糖饮料摄入量相关的儿童总体行为改善;与身体活动和睡眠相关的个别儿童行为改善;以及由于时间效应导致每周饮酒量和每2周暴饮次数的减少。然而,没有研究为报告的显著结果提供样本量计算。此外,由于纳入研究数量较少且每项研究评估的干预措施不同,无法合并结果以确定参与者参与度、干预设计或社区背景是否对有效性有任何影响。

结论

由于缺乏样本量计算,无法确定有效性差异是由于干预措施还是I型统计错误。因此,在解释这些结果时需要谨慎。

试验注册

PROSPERO CRD42023395710;https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/view/CRD42023395710

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/062b/12079056/5854013b1489/jmir_v27i1e57019_fig1.jpg

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