Abstract

BackgroundCameroon still has relatively high maternal mortality rate (MMR) of 596/100,000 live births. Approximately 40% of births are unattended by skilled healthcare personnel with high out-of-pocket expenditures. Poor resource allocation, poorly functioning referral systems, long trekking distances to health facilities, all of which lead to low rates of use of maternal health services.ObjectivesThe aim of this pilot study is to explore perception and acceptability of mobile health (mhealth) and e-voucher and to determine the feasibility of conducting a large cluster randomized trial to determine the effects of combining e-vouchers and a mobile application compared with usual care in improving access to and use of maternal health services.MethodsThis is a multimethod study that comprises two phases. The first phase is the development of the mobile phone app, which includes a qualitative formative study through in-depth key informant interviews and focus group discussions. The second phase is a cluster randomized control trial assessing the combination of e-vouchers and a mobile application compared with usual care in improving access to and use of maternal health services. Feasibility will be determined based on evaluating randomization, contamination, enrollment rate, complete follow up, compliance rate, success in matching data from different sources, and data completeness.Ethics and discussionEthics approval has been granted, and the trial has been registered in the Pan-African Clinical Trials Registry. We will disseminate our findings through peer-reviewed manuscripts and conference presentations. Findings from this study will inform the design and conduct of a larger randomized trial.Trial registrationPACTR201808703097367. The trial on the Pan African Clinical Trials Registry.

Highlights

  • Cameroon still has relatively high maternal mortality rate (MMR) of 596/100,000 live births

  • The aim of this study is to explore perception and acceptability of using mhealth and e-voucher in delivery RMNCH and to determine the feasibility of conducting a cluster randomized trial to increase access and utilization of antenatal care, skilled birth delivery, and family planning awareness among rural poor women in Cameroon using targeted e-vouchers and mobile phone applications

  • The outcome of the feasibility project is to introduce an innovative platform for RMNCH delivery called the BornFyne-prenatal management system (PNMS) project

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Summary

Introduction

Cameroon still has relatively high maternal mortality rate (MMR) of 596/100,000 live births. One potential factor associated with this stagnant progress toward achieving a considerable decline in maternal mortality is the low percentage (64%) of women delivering in hospitals [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9] This finding has been attributed partly to the policies that affect the healthcare delivery system, especially with respect to resource allocation and poorly functioning referral systems, coupled with the introduction of user fees in the public health sector [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9], resulting in an out-ofpocket per capita expenditure of 94.6% [2]

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