| Literature DB >> 30093368 |
Lisa M Daly1, Dell Horey2, Philippa F Middleton3, Frances M Boyle1, Vicki Flenady1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Perinatal morbidity and mortality are significant public health issues with an enduring impact on the health and well-being of women and their families. Millions of pregnant women now download and use mobile applications to access, store, and share health information. However, little is known about the consequences. An investigation of their impact on perinatal health outcomes is particularly topical.Entities:
Keywords: apps; behavior change; infant; intervention; maternal; mobile; perinatal; pregnancy; systematic review
Year: 2018 PMID: 30093368 PMCID: PMC6107729 DOI: 10.2196/10012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Primary and secondary outcome measures.
| Outcome | Outcome characteristics | |
| Maternal | Change in maternal behaviors (as defined by trial authors), by intervention goals | |
| Maternal | Major adverse maternal outcome (composite of death, admission to intensive care unit, or near-miss mortality as defined by the World Health Organization) Antepartum hemorrhage Postpartum hemorrhage Preeclampsia Gestational diabetes mellitus Emergency cesarean birth Successful initiation of breastfeeding Maternal knowledge (about the topic targeted by intervention) Maternal general health (as defined by standardized measures such as general health questionnaires) Maternal evaluation of the intervention (as reported by the trial) Maternal psychosocial outcomes, such as satisfaction or anxiety (as measured by any validated, standard instrument) Health service utilization (antenatal care attendance, maternal antenatal admission, length of hospital stays of mother or infant) | |
| Infant | Stillbirth Neonatal death Small for gestational age Large for gestational age Preterm birth (<32 weeks' gestation) Gestational age at birth Cesarean section Major neonatal morbidities (as defined by trial authors) | |
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis diagram of included and excluded studies.
The characteristics of included studies.
| Study characteristics | Ainscough et al [ | Choi et al [ | Ledford et al [ | Zairina et al [ |
| Country | Ireland | United States | United States | Australia |
| Year | 2016 | 2016 | 2016 | 2016 |
| Design | Randomized controlled trial | Randomized controlled trial | Randomized controlled trial | Randomized controlled trial |
| Aim | To investigate the influence of a mobile phone app-supported antenatal healthy lifestyle intervention on the behavioral stage of change among overweight and obese pregnant women | To examine the feasibility of subject recruitment, randomization, intervention, and efficacy of an mHealth physical activity program for physically inactive pregnant women | To compare the effectiveness of a mobile application with a spiral-notebook guide in prenatal care | To evaluate the efficacy of a telehealth program supported by a handheld respiratory device in improving asthma control during pregnancy |
| Participants (risk category) | 204 pregnant women with body mass index≥25 and <40 kg/m2 (Moderate) | 30 pregnant women with a sedentary lifestyle and intent to be physically active (Low) | 150 low-risk obstetrics participants following standard care pathway (Low) | 72 pregnant women with asthma (Moderate) |
| Control group (n) | Standard care: no consistent diet or lifestyle advice offered (98) | Recommendations for gestational weight gain and safety instruction for promoting physical activity during pregnancy, and an accelerometer (15) | Standard care: a spiral notebook designed to educate participants about pregnancy and enable recording of pregnancy experiences (78) | Standard care through a participant information brochure (36) |
| Intervention group (n) | A “healthy lifestyle package” of individualized nutrition counseling and exercise advice, supported by a mobile phone app (106) | The same information and an accelerometer as women in the control group plus a mobile phone application, a daily message, activity diary, and feedback graphs of personal data (15) | The standard care spiral notebook replaced with a mobile app with identical content. (72) | In addition to standard care, participants were given a mobile app to record data, a proprietary medical device intended for measuring lung function (COPD-6) and a written asthma action plan (36) |
Participant characteristics.
| Study characteristics | Ainscough et al [ | Choi et al [ | Ledford et al [ | Zairina et al [ | |
| Participant risk category | Moderate | Low | Low | Moderate | |
| 204 | 30 | 150 | 72 | ||
| Control, n | 98 | 15 | 78 | 36 | |
| Intervention, n | 106 | 15 | 72 | 36 | |
| Inclusion characteristic among pregnant women | Body mass index≥25 and <40 kg/m2 | Desire to increase physical activity | Low-risk | Asthma | |
| Group differences | No | No | No | No | |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | —a | 33.7 (2.6) | 28.91 (5.03) | 31.45 (4.5) | |
| Gestation age at recruitment (weeks); mean (SD) | 15b | 17.2 (3.4) | 10-12b | 16.35 (2.9) | |
| Marriedc, n (%) | — | 29 (97) | 133 (92.4) | 56 (78) | |
| Body mass index (kg/m2)d, mean (SD) | — | 27.7 (3.7) | — | 28.5 (5.7) | |
| White | — | 13 (43) | 100 (69.4) | 60 (83) | |
| Asian | — | 12 (40) | 8 (5.6) | 6 (8) | |
| Black/African-American | — | 2 (7) | 14 (9.7) | — | |
| Hispanic/Latina | — | 3 (10) | 15 (10.4) | — | |
| Other | — | — | 7 (4.7) | 6 (8) | |
| High school graduate | — | 6 (20) | 51 (34.0) | 9 (13) | |
| University graduate | — | 24 (80) | 92 (61.3) | 45 (63) | |
| Ability to communicate in English | — | Yes | — | Yes | |
aDashes indicate unreported values.
bStandard deviation was not reported.
cStudies reporting data used the term “married,” except the Choi et al study, with response category “married/cohabitating.”
dChoi et al reported prepregnancy body mass index. Zairina et al reported study baseline.
eResponse categories as described by study authors.
Intervention features by the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) checklist.
| Study characteristics | Ainscough et al [ | Choi et al [ | Ledford et al [ | Zairina et al [ |
| Brief name (trial registration) | Mobile app as a prenatal education and engagement tool (No registration provided) | |||
| Why | Investigate the influence of mobile app-supported antenatal healthy lifestyle intervention on the behavioral stage of change | Examine the feasibility of an mHealth physical activity program | Compare the effectiveness of a mobile app with a spiral-notebook guide in prenatal care | Evaluate the efficacy of a telehealth program supported by a handheld respiratory device in improving asthma control during pregnancy |
| What (materials) | Mobile app | Mobile app, accelerometer | Mobile app | Mobile app, a proprietary medical device intended for measuring lung function (COPD-6), individualized written asthma action plan (WAAP) |
| What (procedures) | Participants received individualized nutrition counseling and exercise advice, and mobile app. Behavioral stage-of-change score measured at baseline and late pregnancy | Participants provided with a mobile app, accelerometer, and goal-setting session at baseline. Data remotely monitored and extracted | Participants provided with a mobile app. Paper-based surveys completed at each prenatal appointment. App use assessed. Outcomes reported from health record at delivery | Participants received a COPD-6, mobile app, and individualized WAAP. Data transmitted automatically to a server accessed by researchers, participants, and clinicians. Data collected at 3 and 6 months from baseline, and after delivery |
| Who provided | Not described | Research staff | Antenatal care providers, researchers | Antenatal care providers, researchers |
| How | Mobile app | Mobile app | Mobile app | Mobile app |
| Where | Not described. Study authors based in Dublin, Ireland | Not described. Participants recruited by obstetricians, prenatal clinics, and communities (San Francisco, United States) | Community hospital in women’s health and family medicine departments (Maryland, United States) | Antenatal clinics of two large maternity hospitals (Melbourne, Australia) |
| When and how much | From (mean of) 15 weeks’ gestation to 28 weeks’ gestation | From 10-20 weeks’ gestation, continuing for 12 weeks | From 8-10 weeks’ gestation, continuing throughout pregnancy | From (mean of) 16.7 weeks’ gestation, continuing throughout pregnancy |
| Tailoring | Individualized nutrition and exercise advice | Individualized prescheduled weekly step goals | Not described | Individualized WAAP and weekly feedback messages |
| Modification of intervention during trial | Not described | Not described | Not described | Not described |
| Strategies to improve or maintain intervention fidelity | Not described | Feedback offered on user progress, based on uploaded activity diaries | Not described | Feedback based on individualized WAAP, lung function and asthma symptoms |
| Extent of intervention fidelity | Retention and adherence rates not reported | 97% (29/30) participants retained during the intervention. Adherence by intervention group waned over the study period | 73% (127/173) participants retained during the intervention. Change mainly due to miscarriage and elevation to high-risk care | 96% (69/72) participants retained during the intervention |
Primary maternal outcomes: change in maternal behaviors by intervention goals.
| Study | Study results | |
| Primary maternal outcome | Results | |
| Ainscough et al [ | Shift in the stage-of-change score (transitioning from contemplation/preparation to maintenance stage of healthy lifestyle behaviors in pregnancy): baseline to 28 weeks. Study participants at Maintenance stage (stage 5). | Mean score showing a shift in stage-of-change score distribution observed for both groups. Change reported as more significant for the intervention group ( At 28 weeks, a higher proportion of intervention group at stage 5 (52.8%) compared with the control group (32.7%), (χ2=8.4, |
| Choi et al [ | Physical activity: change in mean steps per day. | Intervention participants had a greater increase in daily steps at 12 weeks with 1096 (SD 1898) steps, compared with 259 (SD 1604) steps among control participants ( |
| Ledford et al [ | Patient use of a tool to find information about pregnancy (information-seeking). Patient use of tool to record information about pregnancy (information-recording). Patient activation at 32 weeks’ gestation (use of a tool). | No significant difference detected between the 2 groups (data not provided). Across all time points, intervention group recorded more frequent use of information source than the control group ( The intervention group activation score was greater than controls (patient activation score marginal mean 79.88 versus 74.81 ( |
| Zairina et al [ | Asthma control (ACQ) 6 months from baseline. | Mean difference between groups was significant (–0.36 [SD 0.15], |