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Perceptions of a mobile health intervention for community case management in Malawi : Opportunities and challenges for health surveillance assistants in a community setting

Chirambo, Griphin Baxter ; Hardy, Victoria E. ; Heavin, Ciara ; O’Connor, Yvonne ; O’ Donoghue, John ; Mastellos, Nikolaos ; Tran, Tammy ; Hsieh, Jenny ; Wu, Joseph Tsung Shu and Carlsson, Sven LU , et al. (2018) In Malawi Medical Journal 30(1). p.6-12
Abstract

Background Improved availability of mobile phones in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) offer an opportunity to improve delivery of Community Case Management (CCM). Despite enthusiasm for introducing mHealth into healthcare across LMICs, end-user attitudes towards mHealth solutions for CCM are limited. We aimed to explore Health Surveillance Assistants’ (HSAs) perceptions of the Supporting LIFE electronic CCM Application (SL eCCM App) and their experiences incorporating it as part of their clinical practice. Methods This exploratory qualitative study was part of a mixed methods feasibility study investigating whether children under-5 presenting to village clinics could be followed-up to collect patient outcome data. The... (More)

Background Improved availability of mobile phones in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) offer an opportunity to improve delivery of Community Case Management (CCM). Despite enthusiasm for introducing mHealth into healthcare across LMICs, end-user attitudes towards mHealth solutions for CCM are limited. We aimed to explore Health Surveillance Assistants’ (HSAs) perceptions of the Supporting LIFE electronic CCM Application (SL eCCM App) and their experiences incorporating it as part of their clinical practice. Methods This exploratory qualitative study was part of a mixed methods feasibility study investigating whether children under-5 presenting to village clinics could be followed-up to collect patient outcome data. The convenience sample of 12 HSAs enrolled into the feasibility study participated in semi-structured interviews, which were conducted at village clinics after HSAs had field-tested the SL eCCM App over a 10-day period. Interviews explored HSAs perceptions of the SL eCCM App and their experiences in using the App in addition to paper CCM to assess and treat acutely unwell children. Open coding was used to label emerging concepts, which were iteratively defined and developed into six key themes. Results HSAs’ perceived enhanced clinical decision-making, quality of CCM delivery, and work efficiency as opportunities associated with using the SL eCCM App. HSAs believed the inability to retrieve patient records,, cumbersome duplicate assessments/data entry study procedures, and inconsistencies between the SL eCCM App and paper-based CCM guidelines as challenges to implementation. Adding features to the App, such as, permitting communication between colleagues/supervisors, drug stock-out reporting, and community assessments, were identified as potentially supporting HSAs’ many roles in the community. Conclusion This study identified opportunities and challenges associated with using the SL eCCM App in Malawi. This information can be used to inform future development and evaluation of the SL eCCM App, and similar mHealth solutions for CCM in Malawi and other developing countries.

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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Malawi Medical Journal
volume
30
issue
1
pages
7 pages
publisher
Malawi Medical Journal
external identifiers
  • scopus:85044753793
  • pmid:29868152
ISSN
1995-7262
DOI
10.4314/mmj.v30i1.2
project
Supporting LIFE (Supporting Low-cost Intervention For disEase control)
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0b747904-f6ac-4740-85ad-f937888579b4
date added to LUP
2018-04-11 13:21:16
date last changed
2024-04-15 06:16:08
@article{0b747904-f6ac-4740-85ad-f937888579b4,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background Improved availability of mobile phones in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) offer an opportunity to improve delivery of Community Case Management (CCM). Despite enthusiasm for introducing mHealth into healthcare across LMICs, end-user attitudes towards mHealth solutions for CCM are limited. We aimed to explore Health Surveillance Assistants’ (HSAs) perceptions of the Supporting LIFE electronic CCM Application (SL eCCM App) and their experiences incorporating it as part of their clinical practice. Methods This exploratory qualitative study was part of a mixed methods feasibility study investigating whether children under-5 presenting to village clinics could be followed-up to collect patient outcome data. The convenience sample of 12 HSAs enrolled into the feasibility study participated in semi-structured interviews, which were conducted at village clinics after HSAs had field-tested the SL eCCM App over a 10-day period. Interviews explored HSAs perceptions of the SL eCCM App and their experiences in using the App in addition to paper CCM to assess and treat acutely unwell children. Open coding was used to label emerging concepts, which were iteratively defined and developed into six key themes. Results HSAs’ perceived enhanced clinical decision-making, quality of CCM delivery, and work efficiency as opportunities associated with using the SL eCCM App. HSAs believed the inability to retrieve patient records,, cumbersome duplicate assessments/data entry study procedures, and inconsistencies between the SL eCCM App and paper-based CCM guidelines as challenges to implementation. Adding features to the App, such as, permitting communication between colleagues/supervisors, drug stock-out reporting, and community assessments, were identified as potentially supporting HSAs’ many roles in the community. Conclusion This study identified opportunities and challenges associated with using the SL eCCM App in Malawi. This information can be used to inform future development and evaluation of the SL eCCM App, and similar mHealth solutions for CCM in Malawi and other developing countries.</p>}},
  author       = {{Chirambo, Griphin Baxter and Hardy, Victoria E. and Heavin, Ciara and O’Connor, Yvonne and O’ Donoghue, John and Mastellos, Nikolaos and Tran, Tammy and Hsieh, Jenny and Wu, Joseph Tsung Shu and Carlsson, Sven and Andersson, Bo and Muula, Adamson S. and Thompson, Matthew}},
  issn         = {{1995-7262}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{03}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{6--12}},
  publisher    = {{Malawi Medical Journal}},
  series       = {{Malawi Medical Journal}},
  title        = {{Perceptions of a mobile health intervention for community case management in Malawi : Opportunities and challenges for health surveillance assistants in a community setting}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/mmj.v30i1.2}},
  doi          = {{10.4314/mmj.v30i1.2}},
  volume       = {{30}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}