Accepted for/Published in: JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Date Submitted: Aug 15, 2019
Date Accepted: Mar 12, 2020
Promoting Antenatal Care Attendance Through a Text-Message Intervention in Samoa
ABSTRACT
Background:
Antenatal care (ANC) has the potential to improve maternal health, but remains under-utilized and unevenly implemented in many low- and middle-income countries. Increasingly, text-messaging programs for pregnant women show evidence that they can improve utilization of ANC during pregnancy, however, gaps remain regarding how implementation affects outcomes.
Objective:
We aim to assess facilitators and barriers to implementation of a text-messaging intervention for pregnant women in Samoa, and to assess its impact on ANC attendance.
Methods:
This study took place in Upolu, Samoa from March-August 2014 and employed a quasi-experimental design. Half (n=3) of the public antenatal clinics on the island offered adult pregnant women the text message intervention, with 552 women registering for the messages. At the comparison clinics (n=3), 255 women registered and received usual care. The intervention consisted of unidirectional text messages containing health tips and appointment reminders. The outcome of interest was the number of antenatal visits attended. Implementation data was also collected through a survey of the participating midwives (n=7) and implementation notes. Data analysis included the comparison of women’s baseline characteristics between the two groups, followed by the use of linear regressions to test for associations between participation in the intervention and increased ANC attendance, controlling for individual characteristics and accounting for the clustering of women within clinics.
Results:
Comparison of ANC attendance rates found that women receiving the text-message intervention attended 0.37 fewer ANC visits than the comparison group (P=0.05), controlling for individual characteristics and clustering. Data analysis of the implementation process suggests that barriers to successful implementation include women registering very late in pregnancy, sharing their phone with others and inconsistent explanation of the intervention to women.
Conclusions:
These results suggest that unidirectional text messages do not encourage, and might even discourage, antenatal care attendance in Samoa. Interpreted with other evidence in the literature, these results suggest that text message interventions are more effective when they facilitate better communication between patients and health workers. This study is an important contribution to our understanding of when text message interventions are, and are not, effective to improve maternal health care utilization.
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