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Previously submitted to: JMIR Formative Research (no longer under consideration since Aug 13, 2024)

Date Submitted: Aug 26, 2023

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Feasibility and acceptability of a multi-component mhealth group social support and education intervention for postpartum women in India

  • Nadia Diamond-Smith; 
  • Alison El Ayadi; 
  • Rashmi Bagga; 
  • Mona Duggal; 
  • Jasmeet Kaur; 
  • Preetika Sharma; 
  • Garima Singh; 
  • Alka Ahuja; 
  • Vijay Kumar; 
  • Dallas Swendeman; 
  • Ankita Kankaria; 
  • Vaibhav Miglani; 
  • Naveen Mutyala; 
  • Pushpendra Singh

ABSTRACT

Background:

Postpartum care is critical for maternal and infant health. Women in India receive fewer than recommended postpartum visits and have limited social support. Through a community engaged process, we developed a mobile intervention (mhealth) for postpartum women that provided health related content and brought together groups of women in calls to promote social support. We describe the feasibility and acceptability of this intervention, consisting of weekly video/phone groups for 6 months postpartum, combined with interactive voice response (IVR) and mobile app based audios with time-relevant content.

Objective:

To test the feasibility and acceptability of different modalities of a postpartum digital health intervention.

Methods:

Recruitment: In 2021, 201 women were recruited in the last 2 months of pregnancy in Punjab, India. Statistical Analysis: We analysed pre/post intervention survey and back-end data about engagement in the group calls, IVR, and app audios using descriptive statistics and multivariable regression models.

Results:

Most (78%) participants were very satisfied, and satisfaction and system usability scores were highest among women who received the intervention with a group component (group calls [zoom or voice], WhatsApp and IVR or App) compared to women who only received IVR or App. Attendance on the group calls was between 4-10 of 20 participants invited per call, and was fairly stable over the 8 month intervention. App use was low with less than 31% of audios listened to for over half the duration.

Conclusions:

Principal

Results:

A mobile intervention for postpartum women that combined educational content via app and IVR with group calls was highly acceptable. While women reported high satisfaction and usability, most women offered the app or IVR audios did not listen to the content. The stability of group call participation suggests these were acceptable for a subset of women. Limitations: This was a small pilot study in one region of India, limiting generalizability. Comparison with Prior Work: This work reinforces the limitations of apps and IVR, as found by others, and adds to our understanding of how newer technologies such as zoom could reach these hard to reach populations.

Conclusions:

Apps and IVR-based interventions may only be appropriate for select subpopulations, however, group calls hold potential and warrant further exploration. Clinical Trial: The intervention is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04636398).


 Citation

Please cite as:

Diamond-Smith N, El Ayadi A, Bagga R, Duggal M, Kaur J, Sharma P, Singh G, Ahuja A, Kumar V, Swendeman D, Kankaria A, Miglani V, Mutyala N, Singh P

Feasibility and acceptability of a multi-component mhealth group social support and education intervention for postpartum women in India

JMIR Preprints. 26/08/2023:52187

DOI: 10.2196/preprints.52187

URL: https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/52187

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