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Nthabi in Lesotho - Implementation

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Boston University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Preconception Care

Treatments

Behavioral: mHealth Application

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04354168
H-40268
R21TW011361-01 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This project will determine how well the mobile health (mHealth) Nthabi application is introduced and used at district hospitals in Lesotho. This will help with measuring the effectiveness of an evidence-based mHealth application in a low-income country. Three factors will be studied when assessing the mHealth application's overall impact: 1) end-user content knowledge 2) pre and post stage of change and 3) system usage. This data will be collected by the mHealth application. End-users will use the mHealth application over a period of two months. Results will be shared with the clinical, health services research, information technology, and policy communities.

Full description

Lesotho has second-highest HIV and fifth-highest tuberculosis prevalence rates worldwide, and a maternal mortality rate (1024/100,000) that is among the highest in Africa. As there are only 6.2 nurses and 0.5 physicians per 10,000 people, both about one-third of the African average, there is an enormous need for eHealth systems to assist the clinical care system.

Preconception care is an effort to focus on engaging young women in their health before they become pregnant since many women enter pregnancy at risk for poor outcomes because of preexisting medical conditions or not following evidence-based preventive action. In 2013, the WHO prioritized research that focuses on developing, delivering, and scaling preconception women's health interventions in low and middle-income countries to optimize health and birth outcomes. The WHO emphasized implementation research as the key step in helping to maximize the coverage and uptake of preconception care to enhance the long-term health outcomes for women and their children.

The existing "Gabby" system is a patient-facing, user-friendly, evidence-based, scalable, culturally adaptive, health communication system designed to improve women's health. The investigator's team has developed and tested several Embodied Conversational Agents (ECAs), which are virtual characters designed using expertise from health communication, psychotherapy, social psychology, sociolinguistics, linguistics, and communication theory.

For this project, the investigators will first adapt the existing "Gabby" system to a culturally appropriate mHealth application, called "Nthabi", and second, study the impact of the Nthabi application into district hospitals in Lesotho in partnership with the Lesotho Boston Health Alliance (LeBoHA) using the existing educational infrastructure. The research team will assess the effectiveness of Nthabi based on the periodic stage of change assessments over the two-month implementation, end-user content knowledge, and system usage.

Enrollment

160 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 28 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Female Resident of Lesotho
  • English Speaking
  • Have access to an Android smartphone
  • Not currently pregnant at time of enrollment

Exclusion criteria

-None

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

160 participants in 1 patient group

Nthabi mHealth Application
Experimental group
Description:
About 20 women from each of the ten district hospitals will be recruited. Each district hospital will have a separate administrative page on the Nthabi server where women will be enrolled with a unique username and password. Upon enrollment, the women will be asked to engage with Nthabi for two months to discuss the relevant content areas they are interested in learning more about.
Treatment:
Behavioral: mHealth Application

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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