| Literature DB >> 33717497 |
Angella Musiimenta1,2, Wilson Tumuhimbise1, Niels Pinkwart3, Jane Katusiime1, Godfrey Mugyenyi1, Esther C Atukunda1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Uganda's maternal mortality rate remains unacceptably high. Mobile phones can potentially provide affordable means of accessing maternal health services even among the otherwise hard-to-reach populations. Evidence about the acceptability and feasibility of mobile phone-based interventions targeting illiterate women, however, is limited.Entities:
Keywords: Mobile phones; acceptability; feasibility; illiterate pregnant women; maternal health; multimedia videos/audio
Year: 2021 PMID: 33717497 PMCID: PMC7917428 DOI: 10.1177/2055207620986296
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Digit Health ISSN: 2055-2076
Socio-demographic and basic health status characteristics of all study participants.
| Pregnant women (n = 80(%) | |
|---|---|
| Median age (years) include IQR | 25 (IQR = 10) |
| Marital status | Married (70, 88%) |
| Education | |
| -Lower primary up to P3* | 11 (14%) |
| -Upper primary (P4 to P7)* | 65 (81%) |
| -No education | 4 (5%) |
| Reading | |
| -Able to read basic English | 21 (27%) |
| -Able to read Runyankole | 74 (95%) |
| -Living with HIV | 9 (11%) |
| Mean (SD) months of pregnancy | 3.4 (1.1) |
| Mean (SD) months of follow-up | 6.1 (6.0) |
| No regular income | 65 (81%) |
| Household food not enough | 60 (75%) |
In the Ugandan education system, P3 is often attended by 6 to 8 year olds. P4 to P7 is often attended by 9 to 12 year olds.
Technical feasibility of the maternal health application.
| Issues | Comment (n = 35 (%)) |
|---|---|
| Phone charging | 15 (43%) of participants reported not having electricity for charging phones in their homes. |
| Phone sharing | 26 (74%) of the participants reported sharing their phones with other people especially spouses. Two of these participants’ study phones were in possession of their spouses at time collecting this study, who were not staying with the participants during the study time. |
| Phone selling | 3 (9%) reported having sold their phones to raise some money for basic needs. |
| Setting of reminding | 20 (57%) reported having not used the application to set antenatal/postnatal reminders. The study team set the first reminders, but all participants had to set subsequent reminders. Although participants were oriented in setting reminders, they later confessed having failed to set the reminders. Some of them resorted to coming to the study office monthly for assistance with setting appointment dates. |
| Calling function | 23 (66%) of the women used the app to call the maternal health specialist (gynecologist) |
| Re-installing the application | 15 (43%) of the participants had their applications re-installed by the study team due to accidental deletion by either the participants themselves or the ones they shared the phones with. |
| Lost follow-up | 5 (13%) of participants were lost to follow up due to non-functioning phone numbers. |