Abstract

BackgroundDespite many efforts, maternal mortality remains a major burden in most developing countries. Mobile health (mHealth) has the potential to improve access to obstetric care through apps that help patients and providers.ObjectiveThis study aimed to use mHealth to provide antenatal care (ANC) to 1446 pregnant women in a rural area in Madagascar and evaluate the quality of ANC provided by an mHealth system designed to change the behaviors of providers and patients.MethodsWe included 1446 women who attended ANC visits in rural Madagascar from 2015 to 2019 using an mHealth system called Pregnancy and Newborn Diagnostic Assessment (PANDA). This cross-sectional study used data from different participants, with information collected over several years, to analyze the outputs related to the quality of ANC over time. Specifically, we examined the timing of the first ANC visit, the relationship between the visit duration and the risk factors among pregnant women, and the number of ANC visits per woman.ResultsFollowing the implementation of the mHealth system in 2015, we observed that women started to come earlier for their first ANC visit; more women attended their first ANC visit in the second trimester of pregnancy in 2019 than in the previous years (P<.001). In 2019, fewer women attended their first ANC visit in the third trimester (57/277, 20.6%) than in 2015 (147/343, 42.9%). There were statistically significant associations between the ANC visit durations and the risk factors, including age (>35 years; 25.0 min, 95% CI 24.0-25.9), educational level (longer visit for women with lower than primary education and for women who attended university and shorter for women with primary school–level education; 40.7 min, 95% CI 30.2-51.3 and 25.3 min, 95% CI 24.4-26.3 vs 23.3 min, 95% CI 22.9-23.8; P=.001), experience of domestic violence during pregnancy, gravidity, parity, infectious diseases (HIV, malaria, and syphilis), and level of anemia. Statistically significant associations were observed for all quality indicator variables. We observed a statistically significant increase in the number of ANC visits per woman over time from 2015 to 2017; the number of ANC visits per woman then became stable after the third year of implementing the PANDA mHealth system.ConclusionsThis study shows the potential of an mHealth system to improve the quality of ANC, change provider behavior by standardizing ANC visits, and change patient behavior by increasing the willingness to return for subsequent visits and encouraging ANC attendance early in pregnancy. As this is an exploratory study, further studies are necessary to better understand how mHealth can change behavior and identify the conditions required for behavioral changes to persist over time.

Highlights

  • BackgroundMobile health tools are an innovative technology that can allow patients and their health care providers to effectively access medical data before, during, and after medical appointments. mHealth has the potential to improve the quality of health care through apps that can facilitate communication between patients and health care providers [1]

  • This study shows the potential of an mHealth system to improve the quality of Antenatal care (ANC), change provider behavior by standardizing ANC visits, and change patient behavior by increasing the willingness to return for subsequent visits and encouraging ANC attendance early in pregnancy

  • Up to 99% of maternal deaths worldwide occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), and researchers have postulated that a lack of access to high-quality maternal and newborn care is a major reason for maternal deaths in these countries [6,7]

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Summary

Introduction

BackgroundMobile health (mHealth) tools are an innovative technology that can allow patients and their health care providers to effectively access medical data before, during, and after medical appointments. mHealth has the potential to improve the quality of health care through apps that can facilitate communication between patients and health care providers [1]. MHealth has the potential to improve the quality of health care through apps that can facilitate communication between patients and health care providers [1]. Antenatal care (ANC) provides a unique opportunity for screening, diagnosis, and health promotion among pregnant women and their families and communities [8]. Due to the benefits of ANC, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that pregnant women should attend at least four ANC visits to increase opportunities for risk identification, management of pregnancy and/or comorbidities, and health promotion, and since 2016, the WHO recommends eight contacts with health care providers during pregnancy [12]. Mobile health (mHealth) has the potential to improve access to obstetric care through apps that help patients and providers

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