| Literature DB >> 31025838 |
Nicole Ide1, Victoria Hardy1, Griphin Chirambo2, Ciara Heavin3, Yvonne O'Connor3, John O'Donoghue4, Nikolaos Mastellos4, Kanika Dharmayat4, Bo Andersson5, Sven Carlsson5, Adamson Muula6, Matthew Thompson6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Community Case Management (CCM) aims to improve health outcomes among children under five with malaria, diarrhea, and pneumonia, but its effectiveness in Malawi is limited by inconsistent standards of delivery characteristic of paper-based interventions. This may lead to negative impacts on child health outcomes and inefficient use of health system resources. This study evaluated the acceptability and impact of the Supporting LIFE Community Case Management App (SL eCCM App) by Health Surveillance Assistants (HSAs) and caregivers in two districts of Northern Malawi.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31025838 PMCID: PMC6634480 DOI: 10.5334/aogh.919
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Glob Health ISSN: 2214-9996 Impact factor: 2.462
Themes and Categories for Analysis.
| THEME | Theme Definition | CATEGORY | Category Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| HSAs’ overall perceptions of the App and trust in the App to correctly direct clinical management | HSAs’ perceptions of the quality and validity of evidence supporting beliefs that the App will produce desired outcomes | ||
| Degree to which participants perceive current paper CCM methods as intolerable or needing change | |||
| Caregivers’ views on technology, their level of trust in the App, and any concerns about the intervention | Caregivers’ perceptions of the quality and validity of evidence supporting beliefs that the App will produce desired outcomes | ||
| Caregivers’ attitudes toward and value placed on the App as well as familiarity with facts, truths, and principles related to the intervention | |||
| Myths or rumors reported in the community regarding the SL project | |||
| Features of the App that affect the service delivery process | App features that aid HSAs in their clinical assessment of patients | ||
| (Only includes categories which are directly related to the App, not the phone or other aspects) | Changes to the referral process due to the App | ||
| Reports on HSAs’ perceptions of training and their ability to learn to use the App | |||
| Missing or desired features that make the App less desirable compared to standard care | |||
| Usability features of the App that are perceived as advantages over standard care | |||
| Challenges and benefits reported as indirect results of the intervention (i.e. the technology and study procedures) | Concerns or difficulties perceived to using the App on an ongoing basis, or challenges to its sustainability. | ||
| Perception of benefits or advantages from participating in the intervention, above and beyond any impacts on their clinical care provided. | |||
| Any reported changes to the relationship between HSA and caregiver due to the intervention | |||
* Categories taken from CFIR constructs. The names may have been slightly adapted.