| Literature DB >> 27387548 |
Ramkrishnan Balakrishnan1, Vijayaprasad Gopichandran2, Sharadprakash Chaturvedi1, Rahul Chatterjee1, Tanmay Mahapatra3, Indrajit Chaudhuri1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobile phone technology is utilized for better delivery of health services worldwide. In low-and-middle income countries mobile phones are now ubiquitous. Thus leveraging mHealth applications in health sector is becoming popular rapidly in these countries. To assess the effectiveness of the Continuum of Care Services (CCS) mHealth platform in terms of strengthening the delivery of maternal and child health (MCH) services in a district in Bihar, a resource-poor state in India.Entities:
Keywords: Efficiency; Health system; Maternal and child health; Quality; mHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27387548 PMCID: PMC4937606 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-016-0326-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Fig. 1Continuum of Care Services for Maternal and Child Health from registration of pregnancy to the child’s 6th year of age
Features of the existing CommCare mobile platform and new features added in the CCS platform
| Features in CommCare mobile platform | Features added for CCS mobile platform |
|---|---|
| Form Creation: Form builder Interface or upload XLS form | Registration and name based tracking of beneficiaries – pregnant women and children below 6 years of age |
| Workforce Management: Creating, managing and monitoring frontline workers and their day-to-day application usage | Automatic scheduling of home visits for the frontline workers |
| Case Management: Creating a case and tracking through various forms | Automatic generation of list of children due for immunization |
| Multimedia Integration: Images, Audio, Video | Interactive checklist and counseling protocols to promote and gather maternal and child health in the continuum |
| Language: Local Language Support | Animated videos as job aids for providing inter personal communication |
| Logics and Calculations | Tools to compute expected date of delivery, body mass index, child growth standards |
| Reports: Basic interface reports and via email configuring | Convergence and case sharing between health (MoHFW) and nutrition (MoWCD) departments at service delivery level |
| Export Formats: XLS, CSV, ZIP | Data driven supportive supervision for periodical review and monitoring |
| Messaging Compatibility: SMS, IVR | Synchronization of frontline worker activities with supervisor to enable indicators based monitoring through CloudCare |
| Application Programming Interface (API) Access | Activities based approach and effortless data recording of each beneficiary in the continuum |
Fig. 2Conceptual model for the study of CCS as a health system strengthening strategy
Details of CCS project implementation in the district
| S. No | Implementation characteristic | Numbers |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Frontline workers trained | 512 |
| 2 | Supervisors trained | 58 |
| 3 | Total number of pregnant women registered | 19,880 |
| 4 | Total number of children registered | 19,888 |
| 5 | Total number of home visits made by frontline workers | 3, 09,733 |
Data for the period of July 2012 to March 2015
Indicators of coverage of continuum of maternal and child care services in implementation district
| S. No | Indicator | Coverage in implementation area (95 % CI) a | Coverage in implementation District in previous year (%) b | Coverage in rest of Bihar (%) c |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Registration of pregnancy | 83.03 (78.12–86.30) | 56.30 | 50 |
| 2 | Registration within the first trimester | 15.46 (10.54–19.20) | 10.11 | 10 |
| 3 | Complete 3 antenatal visits | 55.94 (48.40–59.23) | 50.55 | 48 |
| 4 | Received at least one TT vaccine | 79.38 (58.90–80.26) | 74.12 | 80 |
| 5 | Received more than 90 Iron and Folic Acid Tablets | 61.59 (44.3–68.4) | 50.23 | 49 |
| 6 | Delivered in a health facility | 83.93 (73.45–88.36) | 58.90 | 66.5 |
| 7 | Baby breastfeeding initiated within 1 h of birth | 97.72 (80.23–98.67) | 73.45 | 73 |
| 8 | Received at least one post-natal home visit | 28.41 (12.45–42.56) | 18 | 10 |
a Data from July 2012 to Aug 2014 b Data from Apr 2011 to Apr 2012 c Data from Apr 2012 to Apr 2013
Fig. 3Caste equity in utilization of continuum of maternal and child care services in the implementation district
Time lag in data transfer from health worker records to maternal and child tracking system (MCTS) database using the paper method
| Description | Time delay/Proportion |
|---|---|
| Average time between service delivery and data capture in MCTS | 72 days |
| Longest time between service delivery and data capture in MCTS | 1113 days |
| Shortest time between service delivery and data capture in MCTS | 0 days |
| Proportion of data entered into MCTS on the same day of service delivery | 0.04 % |