Acheampong Princess R, Mohammed Aliyu, Twumasi-Ankrah Sampson, Sylverken Augustina A, Owusu Michael, Adjei Timothy K, Acquah-Gyan Emmanuel, Owusu-Dabo Ellis
Department of Health Promotion and Disability Studies, School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana.
Reprod Health. 2025 May 31;22(Suppl 1):79. doi: 10.1186/s12978-025-01985-4.
Malaria, acute respiratory infections (ARIs), and diarrhoea are primary causes of morbidity and mortality among children under five years old in Ghana. Despite the implementation of various interventions, the nation struggles to meet relevant health and policy targets. While the potential of mobile health interventions to enhance child health outcomes has been recognized, their impact on prevalent childhood illnesses remains insufficiently explored. This implementation research study aimed to evaluate the effect of a mobile health information system (mHIS) intervention on common childhood illnesses among under-five children residing in rural health districts of Ghana.
In this quasi-experimental study, we enrolled all children under five years old from randomly selected clusters within the rural intervention and control health districts in the Ashanti region, Ghana between November 2018 and December 2021. The Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption Implementation and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework was used to design and implement the intervention. The intervention involved a mobile phone-based information system to monitor childhood conditions, offer telemedicine consultations, and deliver child health promotion messages on nutrition and management of common childhood illnesses to caregivers. By employing the average treatment effect (ATET) and difference-in-difference (DiD) analyses, we assessed outcome disparities in diarrhoea, cough, and presumptive malaria.
The incidence of diarrhoea and malaria decreased in the intervention group. The ATET analysis indicated pre-intervention disparities in presumptive malaria with a post-intervention difference between the groups for diarrhoea and presumptive malaria. Results related to cough, used as a proxy for ARIs, did not provide conclusive results across the intervention and control sites based on this intervention. However, the DiD model highlighted an overall statistically significant reduction in diarrhoea and presumptive malaria.
This study underscores the effectiveness of a mobile phone-based health information system intervention in curbing common childhood morbidities, particularly diarrhoea and presumptive malaria, among under-five children in rural Ghana. This approach demonstrates promise in advancing child health outcomes and contributing to the reduction of prevalent illnesses in resource-constrained settings.
疟疾、急性呼吸道感染(ARI)和腹泻是加纳五岁以下儿童发病和死亡的主要原因。尽管实施了各种干预措施,但该国仍难以实现相关的卫生和政策目标。虽然移动健康干预措施改善儿童健康结果的潜力已得到认可,但其对常见儿童疾病的影响仍未得到充分探索。这项实施性研究旨在评估移动健康信息系统(mHIS)干预措施对加纳农村卫生区五岁以下儿童常见儿童疾病的影响。
在这项准实验研究中,我们纳入了2018年11月至2021年12月期间加纳阿散蒂地区农村干预和对照卫生区中随机选择的群组内的所有五岁以下儿童。采用“覆盖、效果、采用、实施和维持”(RE-AIM)框架来设计和实施干预措施。该干预措施包括一个基于手机的信息系统,用于监测儿童健康状况、提供远程医疗咨询,并向照顾者发送有关营养和常见儿童疾病管理的儿童健康促进信息。通过采用平均治疗效果(ATET)和双重差分(DiD)分析,我们评估了腹泻、咳嗽和推定疟疾方面的结果差异。
干预组的腹泻和疟疾发病率有所下降。ATET分析表明,在推定疟疾方面存在干预前差异,腹泻和推定疟疾在干预后两组之间存在差异。基于此干预措施,作为ARI替代指标的咳嗽结果在干预和对照地点之间未提供确凿结果。然而,DiD模型突出显示腹泻和推定疟疾总体上有统计学意义的减少。
本研究强调了基于手机的健康信息系统干预措施在控制加纳农村五岁以下儿童常见儿童疾病,特别是腹泻和推定疟疾方面的有效性。这种方法在改善儿童健康结果以及在资源有限的环境中减少常见疾病方面显示出前景。