Abstract

Contraceptive prevalence in Nigeria remains among the lowest in the world, which substantially contributes to the country's high maternal and child mortality. Mobile phone technology penetration has increased considerably in Nigeria, opening opportunities for programs to use this medium for reaching their intended audience with health-protective information. In 2017, the Health Communication Capacity Collaborative conducted a cluster-randomized control trial in Kaduna City to assess the efficacy of the digital health tool Smart Client on ideational and behavioral variables related to family planning. Twelve wards in the city were randomly assigned to intervention (6 wards) and control (6 wards) arms of the study. A total of 565 women aged 18-35 years were randomly selected from study wards and consented to participate in the study. At recruitment, the women completed a baseline survey. The women in the intervention group were registered to receive 1 welcome call, 13 program calls, and 3 quiz calls on their mobile phones. Each of the program calls had several segments, including introduction, drama episode, and friend-to-friend chat. The last quiz call included evaluation questions. Women in the control arm received no intervention. The efficacy of the intervention was assessed using both per-protocol and intent-to-treat differences-in-differences techniques. The intervention and control arms were equivalent in terms of key sociodemographic characteristics, with the exception of religion. Attrition was a major challenge in the study. On average, participants receiving the intervention listened to 7.2 drama episodes but only 2.6 personal stories and 1.1 sample dialogues. The results of both per-protocol and intent-to-treat analyses show that the intervention was efficacious in improving relevant ideational and behavioral outcomes. For example, the intent-to-treat results show that the intervention increased women's perceived level of confidence to discuss family planning with a provider by 27.7 percentage points and modern contraceptive prevalence by 14.8 percentage points. This efficacy assessment showed that using an interactive voice response-based digital tool that includes drama is a viable option for promoting positive ideation about family planning and increasing contraceptive use in Nigeria. Significant lessons learned from this efficacy trial include informing participants at the time of recruitment of what the opening segment of the calls will sound like to avoid the calls being mistaken for telemarketing calls and intensive testing prior to scale-up to avoid potential attrition due to technical issues.

Highlights

  • Contraceptive prevalence in Nigeria remains among the lowest in the world, which substantially contributes to the country’s high maternal and child mortality

  • Low contraceptive use is a key contributor to the high levels of fertility, maternal mortality, and infant mortality observed in Nigeria.[4,5]

  • The analyses presented in this manuscript show that an interactive voice response (IVR)-based approach using drama is a viable option for promoting positive ideation related to family planning and increasing contraceptive use in Nigeria

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Contraceptive prevalence in Nigeria remains among the lowest in the world, which substantially contributes to the country’s high maternal and child mortality. Global Health: Science and Practice 2019 | Volume 7 | Number 2 only 10.8% reported using a modern method.[1] Compared with data from the 1999, 2003, and 2013 Demographic and Health Surveys, these latest survey results indicate that contraceptive prevalence in Nigeria has not increased meaningfully over the last 20 years.[2,3] Huge differences among the states and regions have persisted. In 2016, modern contraceptive prevalence varied between 0.2% in Yobe state in the northeast and 30.0% in Oyo state in the southwest.[1] Low contraceptive use is a key contributor to the high levels of fertility, maternal mortality, and infant mortality observed in Nigeria.[4,5] contraception has long been recognized as a crucial intervention for improving maternal and child health outcomes and economic

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.