| Literature DB >> 31366398 |
Christine Marie George1, Fatema Zohura2, Alana Teman3, Elizabeth Thomas3, Tasdik Hasan2, Sohel Rana3, Tahmina Parvin2, David A Sack3, Sazzadul Islam Bhuyian2, Alain Labrique3, Jahed Masud2, Peter Winch3, Elli Leontsini3, Kelsey Zeller3, Farzana Begum2, Abul Hasem Khan4, Sanya Tahmina4, Farazana Munum4, Shirajum Monira2, Munirul Alam2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Cholera-Hospital-Based-Intervention-for-7-Days (CHoBI7) is a handwashing with soap and water treatment intervention program delivered by a health promoter bedside in a health facility and through home visits to diarrhea patients and their household members during the 7 days after admission to a health facility. In a randomized controlled trial among cholera patient households in Bangladesh, the 7-day CHoBI7 program resulted in a significant reduction in cholera among household members of cholera patients and sustained improvements in drinking water quality and handwashing with soap practices 12 months post-intervention. In an effort to take this intervention to scale across Bangladesh in partnership with the Bangladesh Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, this study evaluates the feasibility and acceptability of mobile health (mHealth) programs as a low-cost, scalable approach for CHoBI7 program delivery.Entities:
Keywords: Bangladesh; Cholera; Diarrhea; Formative research; Mobile health; Qualitative research methods; Water, sanitation, and hygiene
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31366398 PMCID: PMC6670164 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-7144-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Formative Research Activities for CHoBI7 Mobile Health Program Development
Example of Theory-based Approach for Development of CHoBI7 mHealth Messages: Psychosocial Factors and IBM-WASH Dimensions
| Psychosocial Factor | Factor Definition | Behavior Change Technique | IBM-WASH Dimension | Example Messages | Hypothesized Change with Intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-Efficacy | The belief in one’s capabilities to organize and execute the courses of action required to manage prospective situations. (Bandura et al. 1997) | mHealth messages providing information on actionable tasks | Structural (Gender Roles)/ Individual | Voice Message
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| mHealth messages encouraging the use of enabling technology | Habitual | Text Message |
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| Descriptive Norms | Perceptions about which behaviors are typically performed by others (Cialdini et al. 2006) | mHealth messages describing the proportion of others in the community performing the same behavior | Community | Voice Message
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| mHealth messages from Aklima, a woman who brought her child to a health facility for diarrhea treatment, and who learned proper handwashing and water treatment behaviors from Dr. Chobi. | Interpersonal | Voice Message
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| Emotion of Nurture | The desire to care for someone, and see them develop or grow. | mHealth messages encouraging nurture of young children as a motivator to practice the key behaviors promoted | Interpersonal | Voice Message
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| Emotion of Disgust | Revulsion that is occasioned by the sight of excreta, rotten food, slime, and bugs. (Curtis et al. 2001) | mHealth messages encouraging the emotion of disgust as a motivator to practice the key behaviors promoted | Individual | Text Message
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| Remembering | To perform a behavior, it has to be remembered at the right time/situation. (Tobias et al. 2009) | mHealth messages reminding households to perform the key behaviors promoted | Habitual | Text Message
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The IBM-WASH Framework Applied to the Development of the CHoBI7 Mobile Health Intervention Based on Qualitative Findings
| BM-WASH Dimension | Contextual Factors | Psychosocial Factors | Technological Factors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Structural/ Societal | • Existing government mobile health programs send out health-related messages on government health days, these include voice and text mobile messages • Potential inclusion of CHoBI7 intervention in the National Operational Plan in Bangladesh • Potential integration of CHoBI7 in existing mobile health programs in Bangladesh | • Government commitment to mobile health as a method to deliver public health information | • Existing government mobile platform has the potential to be used for CHoBI7 intervention delivery at reduced cost • Health Education Bureau in the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare currently develops mobile health messages, and can be potentially engaged for CHoBI7 intervention development |
| Community | • High household mobile phone access and ownership in Bangladesh | • Sharing of mHealth messages with neighbors | • High mobile network coverage in Dhaka, Bangladesh |
| • Most feature phones available in Bangladesh allow for viewing of Bangla script | |||
| Interpersonal | • Females in the households are often the ones responsible for caring for young children • Male household members may not want female household members to receive text and voice messages from an unknown sender | • Female caregivers requesting access to CHoBI7 mHealth messages to allow them to better care for their children | • Text messages allow for sharing with others at a later time • Male household members do not always share mobile messages or their mobile phones with other household members • Timing for mobile message delivery when all household members are present • Adult male household members typically have primary mobile phone ownership in household • Lower female access to mobile phones |
| Individual | • Literacy rate of household members • Limited mobile message sharing by those working outside of the home | • Self-efficacy to open text messages, and respond to interactive voice response messages | • Concerns about being charged a fee for viewing or listening to mobile messages |
| Habitual | • Frequency of exposure to mobile messages | • Outcome expectancy that following recommendations contained in mobile messages will reduce disease | • Voice and text messages as reminders to perform the promoted water, sanitation, and hygiene behaviors |