| Literature DB >> 30254745 |
Harish Nair1, Linda J Williams1, Andrew Marsh2,3, Pallavi Lele3, Tathagata Bhattacharjee3,4, Uddhavi Chavan3, Siddhivinayak Hirve3, Harry Campbell1,5, Sanjay Juvekar3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Traditionally, health care-seeking for child illness is assessed through population-based and nationally representative demographic and health surveys (DHS) that are conducted once every five to seven years and are based on maternal recall. These maternal reports are subject to recall bias. Mobile phones (with the use of GPS technology) have the potential to constantly track movements of phone owners and provide high quality and more accurate data at a population level in low and middle income countries (LMICs) to assess the validity of maternal recall. We provided a group of mothers with smartphones installed with a location-aware application and visited them monthly to administer a survey questionnaire on care-seeking for diarrhoea, fever and cough with fever. This paper assesses for any reactivity to smartphones or repeated study contacts for measuring care-seeking and if this resulted in change in health care provider preference.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30254745 PMCID: PMC6150610 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.08.020807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Characteristics of the three groups compared at baseline*
| Phone group (n = 200) | Longitudinal control group (n = 100) | Cross-sectional control group (n = 449) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of children <5 y old to a mother: | 0.74 | |||
| 1 | 87 (43.5%) | 50 (50%) | 220 (49%) | |
| 2 | 104 (52%) | 46 (46%) | 209 (46.5%) | |
| 3 | 9 (4.5%) | 4 (4%) | 20 (4.5%) | |
| Median maternal age [Median (IQR)], n* | 25 (23-27), n = 194 | 25 (23-27), n = 99 | 25 (23-27), n = 442 | 0.96 |
| Mother ever attended school (%) | 193/193 (100%) | 98/99 (99%) | 436/442 (99%) | 0.27 |
| Completed years of maternal education (Median, IQR), n* | 10 (9-12), n = 192 | 10 (9-12), n = 98 | 10 (9-12), n = 433 | 0.12 |
| Mother’s occupation- agriculture (%) | 37/60 (62%) | 25/34 (74%) | 94/134 (70%) | 0.35 |
| Father’s age (Median IQR), n* | 30 (28-32), n = 193 | 30 (28-32), n = 98 | 30 (28-32), n = 437 | 0.88 |
| Father’s completed years of education, Median (IQR), n* | 12 (10-13), n = 189 | 10 (9-12), n = 97 | 11 (9-13), n = 432 | 0.26 |
| Father’s occupation | 0.10 | |||
| Agriculture (%) | 30/188 (16%) | 12/98 (12%) | 94/429 (22%) | 0.10 |
| Manufacturing (%) | 91/188 (48%) | 56/98 (57%) | 202/429 (47%) | |
| Any mobile phone ownership in household | 196/197 (99.5%) | 98/98 (100%) | 442/446 (99.1%) | 1.00 |
| Smartphone ownership in household | 133/193 (68.9%) | 45/98 (45.9%) | 245/431 (56.8%) | 0.0004 |
| Household wealth quintile: | 0.016 | |||
| 1 | 29 (15%) | 20 (20%) | 101 (22%) | |
| 2 | 36 (18%) | 17 (17%) | 97 (22%) | |
| 3 | 45 (23%) | 22 (22%) | 83 (18%) | |
| 4 | 49 (25%) | 24 (24%) | 77 (17%) | |
| 5 | 41 (21%) | 17 (17%) | 91 (20%) | |
| Religion of head of household- Hindu | 184/199 (92%) | 88/99 (89%) | 410/448 (92%) | 0.30 |
y – years, IQR – interquartile range
*Where there are missing data, the number of respondents have been given.
Episodes of diarrhoea, fever and pneumonia in children younger than 5 y and care seeking in the three groups
| Phone group (n = 1588) | Longitudinal control group (n = 759) | Cross-sectional control group (n = 555) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children <5 y with diarrhoea in past 2 weeks | 64/ 1581 (4%) | 42/757 (6%) | 27/555 (5%) | |
| Proportion of children with diarrhoea who sought care (%, 95% CI)* | 47/63 (75% [64%-85%]) | 33/41 (80% [68%-93%]) | 21/27 (78% [62%-93%]) | 0.69 |
| Children <5 y with fever in past 2 weeks | 341/1570 (22%) | 154/758 (20%) | 105/551 (19%) | |
| Proportion of children with fever who sought care (%, 95% CI)† | 283/341 (83% [79%-87%]) | 120/151 (79% [73%-86%]) | 83/105 (79% [71-87]) | 0.51 |
| From public sector | 24 (8.4%) | 6 (5%) | 4 (5%) | |
| Number of days from onset of fever to first seeking care or advice (Median, IQR), n‡ | 0 (0-1), n = 280 | 0 (0-1), n = 118 | 0 (0-1), n = 83 | |
| Children <5 y with fever and cough in past 2 weeks | 224/1542 (14%) | 95/747 (13%) | 72/545 (13%) | |
| Proportion of children with fever and cough who sought care (%, 95% CI)§ | 195/221 (88% [84%-92%]) | 79/94 (84% [77%-91%]) | 64/72 (89% [82%-96%]) | 0.50 |
| From public sector | 17 (8.7%) | 7 (8.9%) | 2 (3.1%) |
y – years, IQR – interquartile range, CI – confidence interval
*χ2 test: P = 0.69.
†χ2 test: P = 0.51.
‡n = number of respondents.
§χ2 test: P = 0.50.
Figure 1Episodes of diarrhoea, fever and cough with fever in under-5 children and care seeking for these by month during study period.