| Literature DB >> 28962569 |
Julia Schoen1, John William Mallett1, Rebecca Grossman-Kahn1, Alexandra Brentani2, Elizabeth Kaselitz3,4, Michele Heisler5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobile health (m-health) tools are a promising strategy to facilitate the work of community health workers (CHWs) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Despite their potential value, little is known about CHWs' experiences working with m-health tools in their outreach activities with community members.Entities:
Keywords: Brazil; Community health; Community health workers; Primary care; Qualitative research; m-health
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28962569 PMCID: PMC5622566 DOI: 10.1186/s12960-017-0245-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Participant baseline characteristics (N = 57)
| Age, mean (years): | 41 |
| Female (%): | 91 |
| Mean time as CHW (years): | 6 |
| Mean time using Geohealth (years): | 2 |
Experiences of the CHWs with the Geohealth mobile application
| Many ways of using Geohealth | I’ve been using Geohealth for 3 years. I use it on home visits to register families, to look up things about my area like how many kids I have in my area. I write the summaries in the homes by hand, and then I transfer it to the Geohealth system using a cell phone or computer. Usually computer because my Geohealth phone broke. |
| Organization | I use Geohealth to register families, and to update information about families. If there is a new baby or new family member, or death. Families are always changing… Each month a new family arrives or leaves. |
| Accountability | I still use paper to collect signatures at every house I visit to prove that I went to the house. You have situations where a community member goes straight to the health center asking for an appointment and says that a CHW never visited. I can show them that they signed on such and such day proving that I did go there. This helps avoid a lot of confusion. It is a strategy community members have: to say we didn’t go to their house to try to get seen sooner. We need to account for every house we visit. |
Benefits of the Geohealth application
| Saves time spent on bureaucratic paper work | Geohealth makes things faster, you can quickly make lists, filter community members, find all of your hypertensives, and find particular families. So I think Geohealth makes things faster, but the information is safer on paper. |
| Faster access to information | Geohealth makes the quality of our work better. It helps me make lists of community members in my area. I can choose, for example, to see only the pregnant women in my area, or only the 2 year olds, and then I have a complete list right away |
| Weight | I like it because it means less paper for me. In our work we walk a lot, and our backpacks are heavy, and we end up taking off our backpacks in community members’ homes and forgetting them there. |
Barriers to effective use of Geohealth application
| Technical barrier: inefficiency | The negative side is that Geohealth would crash or freeze in the middle of a visit. It would stop all of a sudden and oh, how it would make you angry. |
| Technical barrier: signal strength | It’s just the device that doesn’t work. We always have to wait for the signal and for it to start working. |
| Technical barrier: the device | I used it [Geohealth] for just over a year, but then the device broke on me. I sent it in to be fixed. After 6 months, it came back, but it was still broken in the same way. Now I don’t have one [a smartphone]. |
| Social barrier: community member perceptions | The community members, especially the older ones, complain. They say, look at me! I’m telling you a story, pay attention! |
| Social barrier: safety | I work in a risky area. There is a lot of drug trafficking. If the police pass by, and they see my typing on the Geohealth, they think I’m alerting drug traffickers that they are here. Or if a drug trafficker sees you typing they think you are alerting the police. |
Recommended improvements to Geohealth
| Include more data | Include ALL of our paperwork. Have you seen our paperwork? [she goes into another room and brings back a stack of different papers that CHWs use for their work and for their monthly tallies of data at the end of each month. She shows me each form and how tedious it is to do the counts.] All of this could be done automatically on Geohealth. And then at the end of the month, we’d just print it and be all set. The end of the month days when we have to do these counts. It’s very tense. It is a lot of work: everybody is stressed out. Sometimes I wake up at 3 am to finish. And when you’re new, it is even worse. Oh, it’s a real headache. |
| Communication | It would be wonderful if we could send and receive messages because right now we use WhatsApp. We could contact the family directly if we needed some kind of information. If community members could send text messages with questions for the CHW’s from their personal phone to the CHW’s Geohealth app, that would be incredibly helpful. |
| Logistic improvements | Also, there is no way to get a signature on the cell phone. I have all my community members sign on paper when I visit their house so that I have a way of keeping track, or proving that I visited them, so they can’t say I didn’t go later. I ask for a signature at every visit. Why don’t they add a function for a digital signature? Like a fingerprint? They could just put their thumbprint into the cell phone to sign. That also helps the illiterate community members too. |
| Individually suggested innovations | There are Facebook groups for lots of things. I had a cousin who had her gallbladder removed and needed advice. She found a Facebook group for other patients recovering from the same surgery. That would be good. |
| Improved device | How can the system be improved? A tablet with a stylus would be great, because they we could write with the stylus... it is more natural than typing. I think the community members would be more comfortable with that too because it doesn’t look like we are typing on WhatsApp. It is also faster than typing. |