| Literature DB >> 33243136 |
Eveline M Kabongo1, Ferdinand C Mukumbang2, Peter Delobelle3,4, Edward Nicol5,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: One of the Sustainable Development Goals is to reduce the global maternal mortality ratio to less than 70 per 100,000 live births by 2030. In South Africa, the flagship National Department of Health MomConnect program was launched in 2014 to strengthen the quality of maternal and child health (MCH) services and improve mortality outcomes. MomConnect was rapidly rolled out with a limited understanding of how and why the program was expected to work even though studies had shown the effectiveness of the MomConnect program in improving the uptake of MCH services. This study aimed to unearth the initial program theory of the MomConnect program based on explicit and implicit assumptions of how the program was organized and expected to work.Entities:
Keywords: Maternal and child health; MomConnect; Realist evaluation; Theory of change; mHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33243136 PMCID: PMC7691101 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-020-01164-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Fig. 1Relationship between implementation theory and program theory. Adapted from Eastwood et al., [31]
Fig. 2A framework illustrating the features of ToC and RE (Dhillon and Vaca [24])
Document sources and numbers obtained
| Source or document | Number |
|---|---|
| Google search using ‘MomConnect intervention’ or ‘MomConnect program’ | 266 |
| Google search using ‘MAMA south Africa and MomConnect program’ | 86 |
| Browsing the NDoH website | 18 |
| Requesting MomConnect program design and implementation minutes and reports | 10 |
| Total | 380 |
Fig. 3Document selection flowchart
Fig. 4Identified themes based on Theory of Change framework
Fig. 5The MomConnect program theory of change
Intervention, context, actors, mechanism and outcome elements of realist evaluation
| Modalities | Identified themes |
|---|---|
- Stage-based health information up to a child’s first birthday - Interaction with the health system (service ratings and feedback) | |
- Political clout: NDOH leadership and ownership of MomConnect - Awareness-raising - Staff training sessions on helpdesk, registration procedures and telephonic support - Staff adoption and adaptation of the new technology - Staff availability - Anonymous nature of the SMS helpline - Network availability & ownership of a mobile phone - Length of the registration process | |
- Pregnant women - Mothers of newborns - Community health workers - Health care providers | |
- Encouragement - Empowerment - Motivation - Knowledge acquisition | |
- (Perceived) improvement in quality of MCH services - Improved health-seeking behavior and MCH services uptake |
Fig. 6Realist evaluation model for MomConnect program