
Gaudensia A. Olomi
KCMC University , TanzaniaPresentation Title:
The mHealth clinical decision-making tools for maternal and perinatal health care in Sub-Saharan Africa: A systematic review
Abstract
Mobile Health
(mHealth) refers to use of mobile wireless technologies for health. The
potential for mHealth to enhance healthcare delivery is supported by
near-universal availability of mobile phones and their expanding coverage in
low- and middle-income countries. This systematic review analyses
the available evidence on mHealth clinical
decision-making tools in maternal and perinatal health, and whether they lead to improved maternal and perinatal health outcomes in
Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).
Studies
conducted in SSA describing mHealth tools piloted or used for clinical
decision-making in maternal or perinatal healthcare. Exclusion criteria
included mHealth tools used outside of maternal and perinatal healthcare,
publications lacking sufficient detail (where information couldn’t be obtained
through contacting authors), articles where tools were used on a laptop or
desktop computer, and articles not published in English. PubMed, CINAHL,
EMBASE, Global Health, and Web of Science were searched for relevant articles
following a predetermined search strategy with no date restrictions. A limited
grey literature search was conducted. We assessed the
quality of included studies using the Cochrane Risk of bias 2 tool, Newcastle-
Ottawa scale and COREQ.
This
comprehensive approach ensured a rigorous evaluation of bias and validity in
our systematic review. Two independent reviewers screened articles and
extracted data.
1119 records were screened, and 36
articles met the inclusion criteria. Fifteen mHealth tools were
identified across 11 SSA countries. mHealth tools
for clinical decision-making in maternal and perinatal care were found to be
feasible, usable, and acceptable. They demonstrated adequate user satisfaction, and some demonstrated
improvement of pregnancy outcomes. However, technologies lack scalability, with
only one scaled up nationally, and few tools interacted with existing health
information systems or had
plans for sustainability. This review will help establish best practice for
developing and scaling up mHealth
clinical decision-making tools, helping to improve maternal and
perinatal healthcare in SSA.
Biography
Ms. Gaudensia A. Olomi (BScN, MPH & PhD
Candidate) is a Regional Nurse Officer in the Kilimanjaro region, leading
research activities within the region. She has ten years of experience in
monitoring, coordinating, and providing health services at the regional
level, and she has spent the
last eight years coordinating research activities in the region. She had
experience overseeing and planning all public health initiatives in the
Kilimanjaro region. She has supported the implementation of project activities
in the region for numerous years by working with different research
institutions. She is a PhD candidate at KCMC University, where her focus is on
enhancing the quality of data recorded using electronic health record
system-ULTRA as opposed to paper-based ones in order to improve maternal and
perinatal outcomes. She has published
more than 15 Publications mostly on women and children.