Cargando…

Digital Health Technologies for Maternal and Child Health in Africa and Other Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Cross-disciplinary Scoping Review With Stakeholder Consultation

BACKGROUND: Maternal and child health (MCH) is a global health concern, especially impacting low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). Digital health technologies are creating opportunities to address the social determinants of MCH by facilitating access to information and providing other forms of su...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Till, Sarina, Mkhize, Mirriam, Farao, Jaydon, Shandu, Londiwe Deborah, Muthelo, Livhuwani, Coleman, Toshka Lauren, Mbombi, Masenyani, Bopape, Mamara, Klingberg, Sonja, van Heerden, Alastair, Mothiba, Tebogo, Densmore, Melissa, Verdezoto Dias, Nervo Xavier
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10131761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37027199
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/42161
_version_ 1785031247310880768
author Till, Sarina
Mkhize, Mirriam
Farao, Jaydon
Shandu, Londiwe Deborah
Muthelo, Livhuwani
Coleman, Toshka Lauren
Mbombi, Masenyani
Bopape, Mamara
Klingberg, Sonja
van Heerden, Alastair
Mothiba, Tebogo
Densmore, Melissa
Verdezoto Dias, Nervo Xavier
author_facet Till, Sarina
Mkhize, Mirriam
Farao, Jaydon
Shandu, Londiwe Deborah
Muthelo, Livhuwani
Coleman, Toshka Lauren
Mbombi, Masenyani
Bopape, Mamara
Klingberg, Sonja
van Heerden, Alastair
Mothiba, Tebogo
Densmore, Melissa
Verdezoto Dias, Nervo Xavier
author_sort Till, Sarina
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Maternal and child health (MCH) is a global health concern, especially impacting low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). Digital health technologies are creating opportunities to address the social determinants of MCH by facilitating access to information and providing other forms of support throughout the maternity journey. Previous reviews in different disciplines have synthesized digital health intervention outcomes in LMIC. However, contributions in this space are scattered across publications in different disciplines and lack coherence in what digital MCH means across fields. OBJECTIVE: This cross-disciplinary scoping review synthesized the existing published literature in 3 major disciplines on the use of digital health interventions for MCH in LMIC, with a particular focus on sub-Saharan Africa. METHODS: We conducted a scoping review using the 6-stage framework by Arksey and O’Malley across 3 disciplines, including public health, social sciences applied to health, and human-computer interaction research in health care. We searched the following databases: Scopus, PubMed, Google Scholar, ACM Digital Library, IEEE Xplore, Web of Science, and PLOS. A stakeholder consultation was undertaken to inform and validate the review. RESULTS: During the search, 284 peer-reviewed articles were identified. After removing 41 duplicates, 141 articles met our inclusion criteria: 34 from social sciences applied to health, 58 from public health, and 49 from human-computer interaction research in health care. These articles were then tagged (labeled) by 3 researchers using a custom data extraction framework to obtain the findings. First, the scope of digital MCH was found to target health education (eg, breastfeeding and child nutrition), care and follow-up of health service use (to support community health workers), maternal mental health, and nutritional and health outcomes. These interventions included mobile apps, SMS text messaging, voice messaging, web-based applications, social media, movies and videos, and wearable or sensor-based devices. Second, we highlight key challenges: little attention has been given to understanding the lived experiences of the communities; key role players (eg, fathers, grandparents, and other family members) are often excluded; and many studies are designed considering nuclear families that do not represent the family structures of the local cultures. CONCLUSIONS: Digital MCH has shown steady growth in Africa and other LMIC settings. Unfortunately, the role of the community was negligible, as these interventions often do not include communities early and inclusively enough in the design process. We highlight key opportunities and sociotechnical challenges for digital MCH in LMIC, such as more affordable mobile data; better access to smartphones and wearable technologies; and the rise of custom-developed, culturally appropriate apps that are more suited to low-literacy users. We also focus on barriers such as an overreliance on text-based communications and the difficulty of MCH research and design to inform and translate into policy.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10131761
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-101317612023-04-27 Digital Health Technologies for Maternal and Child Health in Africa and Other Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Cross-disciplinary Scoping Review With Stakeholder Consultation Till, Sarina Mkhize, Mirriam Farao, Jaydon Shandu, Londiwe Deborah Muthelo, Livhuwani Coleman, Toshka Lauren Mbombi, Masenyani Bopape, Mamara Klingberg, Sonja van Heerden, Alastair Mothiba, Tebogo Densmore, Melissa Verdezoto Dias, Nervo Xavier J Med Internet Res Review BACKGROUND: Maternal and child health (MCH) is a global health concern, especially impacting low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). Digital health technologies are creating opportunities to address the social determinants of MCH by facilitating access to information and providing other forms of support throughout the maternity journey. Previous reviews in different disciplines have synthesized digital health intervention outcomes in LMIC. However, contributions in this space are scattered across publications in different disciplines and lack coherence in what digital MCH means across fields. OBJECTIVE: This cross-disciplinary scoping review synthesized the existing published literature in 3 major disciplines on the use of digital health interventions for MCH in LMIC, with a particular focus on sub-Saharan Africa. METHODS: We conducted a scoping review using the 6-stage framework by Arksey and O’Malley across 3 disciplines, including public health, social sciences applied to health, and human-computer interaction research in health care. We searched the following databases: Scopus, PubMed, Google Scholar, ACM Digital Library, IEEE Xplore, Web of Science, and PLOS. A stakeholder consultation was undertaken to inform and validate the review. RESULTS: During the search, 284 peer-reviewed articles were identified. After removing 41 duplicates, 141 articles met our inclusion criteria: 34 from social sciences applied to health, 58 from public health, and 49 from human-computer interaction research in health care. These articles were then tagged (labeled) by 3 researchers using a custom data extraction framework to obtain the findings. First, the scope of digital MCH was found to target health education (eg, breastfeeding and child nutrition), care and follow-up of health service use (to support community health workers), maternal mental health, and nutritional and health outcomes. These interventions included mobile apps, SMS text messaging, voice messaging, web-based applications, social media, movies and videos, and wearable or sensor-based devices. Second, we highlight key challenges: little attention has been given to understanding the lived experiences of the communities; key role players (eg, fathers, grandparents, and other family members) are often excluded; and many studies are designed considering nuclear families that do not represent the family structures of the local cultures. CONCLUSIONS: Digital MCH has shown steady growth in Africa and other LMIC settings. Unfortunately, the role of the community was negligible, as these interventions often do not include communities early and inclusively enough in the design process. We highlight key opportunities and sociotechnical challenges for digital MCH in LMIC, such as more affordable mobile data; better access to smartphones and wearable technologies; and the rise of custom-developed, culturally appropriate apps that are more suited to low-literacy users. We also focus on barriers such as an overreliance on text-based communications and the difficulty of MCH research and design to inform and translate into policy. JMIR Publications 2023-04-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10131761/ /pubmed/37027199 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/42161 Text en ©Sarina Till, Mirriam Mkhize, Jaydon Farao, Londiwe Deborah Shandu, Livhuwani Muthelo, Toshka Lauren Coleman, Masenyani Mbombi, Mamara Bopape, Sonja Klingberg, Alastair van Heerden, Tebogo Mothiba, Melissa Densmore, Nervo Xavier Verdezoto Dias, CoMaCH Network. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 07.04.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Review
Till, Sarina
Mkhize, Mirriam
Farao, Jaydon
Shandu, Londiwe Deborah
Muthelo, Livhuwani
Coleman, Toshka Lauren
Mbombi, Masenyani
Bopape, Mamara
Klingberg, Sonja
van Heerden, Alastair
Mothiba, Tebogo
Densmore, Melissa
Verdezoto Dias, Nervo Xavier
Digital Health Technologies for Maternal and Child Health in Africa and Other Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Cross-disciplinary Scoping Review With Stakeholder Consultation
title Digital Health Technologies for Maternal and Child Health in Africa and Other Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Cross-disciplinary Scoping Review With Stakeholder Consultation
title_full Digital Health Technologies for Maternal and Child Health in Africa and Other Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Cross-disciplinary Scoping Review With Stakeholder Consultation
title_fullStr Digital Health Technologies for Maternal and Child Health in Africa and Other Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Cross-disciplinary Scoping Review With Stakeholder Consultation
title_full_unstemmed Digital Health Technologies for Maternal and Child Health in Africa and Other Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Cross-disciplinary Scoping Review With Stakeholder Consultation
title_short Digital Health Technologies for Maternal and Child Health in Africa and Other Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Cross-disciplinary Scoping Review With Stakeholder Consultation
title_sort digital health technologies for maternal and child health in africa and other low- and middle-income countries: cross-disciplinary scoping review with stakeholder consultation
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10131761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37027199
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/42161
work_keys_str_mv AT tillsarina digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT mkhizemirriam digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT faraojaydon digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT shandulondiwedeborah digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT muthelolivhuwani digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT colemantoshkalauren digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT mbombimasenyani digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT bopapemamara digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT klingbergsonja digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT vanheerdenalastair digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT mothibatebogo digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT densmoremelissa digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT verdezotodiasnervoxavier digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation
AT digitalhealthtechnologiesformaternalandchildhealthinafricaandotherlowandmiddleincomecountriescrossdisciplinaryscopingreviewwithstakeholderconsultation