Jamie Sewan Johnston, Pooja Suri, Shirley Yan, Adithi Chandrasekar, Saumya Singla, Victoria C Ward, Seema Murthy
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the impact of a mobile messaging service that delivers World Health Organization recommendations on postnatal care to families from birth through six weeks postpartum via a messaging platform.
Methods: We randomized tertiary hospitals in four Indian states into two groups. In the treatment group, 15 hospitals promoted the messaging service to families in maternity wards before discharge following a recent birth. Nine control hospitals provided standard in-hospital information. From mid-March 2021 to mid-January 2022, we recruited mothers to participate in the study. Consenting mothers completed a face-to-face baseline survey before hospital discharge after birth and a follow-up phone survey roughly 6 weeks postpartum. Using logistic regression controlling for state-fixed effects and baseline covariates, we examine intent-to-treat estimates and report risk differences.
Findings: A total of 21 937 participants met the inclusion criteria. We observed significant positive impacts in 7 out of 11 neonatal and maternal care practices examined (P-values < 0.05). Breastfeeding increased by 3.1 percentage points, recommended cord care practices by 4.1 percentage points, skin-to-skin care with mothers by 9.2 percentage points, and skin-to-skin care by fathers by 2.2 percentage points. For recommended maternal dietary practices, we observed significant increases in adherence to guidelines advising no reduction of food intake (7.1 percentage points), no reduction of water intake (7.9 percentage points) and no restrictions on food items (10.8 percentage point; P-values < 0.01).
Conclusion: This study demonstrates that concise yet comprehensive digital messaging delivered to families during the postpartum period can effectively encourage recommended postnatal care practices.
期刊介绍:
The Bulletin of the World Health Organization
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Leading public health journal
Peer-reviewed monthly journal
Special focus on developing countries
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Top public and environmental health journal
Impact factor of 6.818 (2018), according to Web of Science ranking
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Provides blend of research, well-informed opinion, and news