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Assessing the reliability of phone surveys to measure reproductive, maternal and child health knowledge among pregnant women in rural India: a feasibility study

OBJECTIVES: Efforts to understand the factors influencing the uptake of reproductive, maternal, newborn, child health and nutrition (RMNCH&N) services in high disease burden low-resource settings have often focused on face-to-face surveys or direct observations of service delivery. Increasing ac...

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Autores principales: Ng, Angela, Mohan, Diwakar, Shah, Neha, Scott, Kerry, Ummer, Osama, Chamberlain, Sara, Bhatnagar, Aarushi, Dhar, Diva, Agarwal, Smisha, Ved, Rajani, LeFevre, Amnesty Elizabeth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8915337/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35273055
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-056076
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author Ng, Angela
Mohan, Diwakar
Shah, Neha
Scott, Kerry
Ummer, Osama
Chamberlain, Sara
Bhatnagar, Aarushi
Dhar, Diva
Agarwal, Smisha
Ved, Rajani
LeFevre, Amnesty Elizabeth
author_facet Ng, Angela
Mohan, Diwakar
Shah, Neha
Scott, Kerry
Ummer, Osama
Chamberlain, Sara
Bhatnagar, Aarushi
Dhar, Diva
Agarwal, Smisha
Ved, Rajani
LeFevre, Amnesty Elizabeth
author_sort Ng, Angela
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Efforts to understand the factors influencing the uptake of reproductive, maternal, newborn, child health and nutrition (RMNCH&N) services in high disease burden low-resource settings have often focused on face-to-face surveys or direct observations of service delivery. Increasing access to mobile phones has led to growing interest in phone surveys as a rapid, low-cost alternatives to face-to-face surveys. We assess determinants of RMNCH&N knowledge among pregnant women with access to phones and examine the reliability of alternative modalities of survey delivery. PARTICIPANTS: Women 5–7 months pregnant with access to a phone. SETTING: Four districts of Madhya Pradesh, India. DESIGN: Cross-sectional surveys administered face-to-face and within 2 weeks, the same surveys were repeated among two random subsamples of the original sample: face-to-face (n=205) and caller-attended telephone interviews (n=375). Bivariate analyses, multivariable linear regression, and prevalence and bias-adjusted kappa scores are presented. RESULTS: Knowledge scores were low across domains: 52% for maternal nutrition and pregnancy danger signs, 58% for family planning, 47% for essential newborn care, 56% infant and young child feeding, and 58% for infant and young child care. Higher knowledge (≥1 composite score) was associated with older age; higher levels of education and literacy; living in a nuclear family; primary health decision-making; greater attendance in antenatal care and satisfaction with accredited social health activist services. Survey questions had low inter-rater and intermodal reliability (kappa<0.70) with a few exceptions. Questions with the lowest reliability included true/false questions and those with unprompted, multiple response options. Reliability may have been hampered by the sensitivity of the content, lack of privacy, enumerators’ and respondents’ profile differences, rapport, social desirability bias, and/or enumerator’s ability to adequately convey concepts or probe. CONCLUSIONS: Phone surveys are a reliable modality for generating population-level estimates data about pregnant women’s knowledge, however, should not be used for individual-level tracking. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT03576157.
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spelling pubmed-89153372022-03-25 Assessing the reliability of phone surveys to measure reproductive, maternal and child health knowledge among pregnant women in rural India: a feasibility study Ng, Angela Mohan, Diwakar Shah, Neha Scott, Kerry Ummer, Osama Chamberlain, Sara Bhatnagar, Aarushi Dhar, Diva Agarwal, Smisha Ved, Rajani LeFevre, Amnesty Elizabeth BMJ Open Global Health OBJECTIVES: Efforts to understand the factors influencing the uptake of reproductive, maternal, newborn, child health and nutrition (RMNCH&N) services in high disease burden low-resource settings have often focused on face-to-face surveys or direct observations of service delivery. Increasing access to mobile phones has led to growing interest in phone surveys as a rapid, low-cost alternatives to face-to-face surveys. We assess determinants of RMNCH&N knowledge among pregnant women with access to phones and examine the reliability of alternative modalities of survey delivery. PARTICIPANTS: Women 5–7 months pregnant with access to a phone. SETTING: Four districts of Madhya Pradesh, India. DESIGN: Cross-sectional surveys administered face-to-face and within 2 weeks, the same surveys were repeated among two random subsamples of the original sample: face-to-face (n=205) and caller-attended telephone interviews (n=375). Bivariate analyses, multivariable linear regression, and prevalence and bias-adjusted kappa scores are presented. RESULTS: Knowledge scores were low across domains: 52% for maternal nutrition and pregnancy danger signs, 58% for family planning, 47% for essential newborn care, 56% infant and young child feeding, and 58% for infant and young child care. Higher knowledge (≥1 composite score) was associated with older age; higher levels of education and literacy; living in a nuclear family; primary health decision-making; greater attendance in antenatal care and satisfaction with accredited social health activist services. Survey questions had low inter-rater and intermodal reliability (kappa<0.70) with a few exceptions. Questions with the lowest reliability included true/false questions and those with unprompted, multiple response options. Reliability may have been hampered by the sensitivity of the content, lack of privacy, enumerators’ and respondents’ profile differences, rapport, social desirability bias, and/or enumerator’s ability to adequately convey concepts or probe. CONCLUSIONS: Phone surveys are a reliable modality for generating population-level estimates data about pregnant women’s knowledge, however, should not be used for individual-level tracking. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT03576157. BMJ Publishing Group 2022-03-10 /pmc/articles/PMC8915337/ /pubmed/35273055 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-056076 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to copy, redistribute, remix, transform and build upon this work for any purpose, provided the original work is properly cited, a link to the licence is given, and indication of whether changes were made. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Global Health
Ng, Angela
Mohan, Diwakar
Shah, Neha
Scott, Kerry
Ummer, Osama
Chamberlain, Sara
Bhatnagar, Aarushi
Dhar, Diva
Agarwal, Smisha
Ved, Rajani
LeFevre, Amnesty Elizabeth
Assessing the reliability of phone surveys to measure reproductive, maternal and child health knowledge among pregnant women in rural India: a feasibility study
title Assessing the reliability of phone surveys to measure reproductive, maternal and child health knowledge among pregnant women in rural India: a feasibility study
title_full Assessing the reliability of phone surveys to measure reproductive, maternal and child health knowledge among pregnant women in rural India: a feasibility study
title_fullStr Assessing the reliability of phone surveys to measure reproductive, maternal and child health knowledge among pregnant women in rural India: a feasibility study
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the reliability of phone surveys to measure reproductive, maternal and child health knowledge among pregnant women in rural India: a feasibility study
title_short Assessing the reliability of phone surveys to measure reproductive, maternal and child health knowledge among pregnant women in rural India: a feasibility study
title_sort assessing the reliability of phone surveys to measure reproductive, maternal and child health knowledge among pregnant women in rural india: a feasibility study
topic Global Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8915337/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35273055
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-056076
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