Connecting mothers to care: Effectiveness and scale-up of an mHealth program in Timor-Leste

Publication Date:

01 Dec 2019

Citation:

Thompson S, Mercer MA, Hofstee M, Stover B, Vasconcelos P, Meyanathan S. (2019). Connecting mothers to care: Effectiveness and scale-up of an mHealth program in Timor-Leste. J Glob Health. 9(2), 20428. doi: 10.7189/jogh.09.020428.

 

Abstract

Background
Health Alliance International (HAI) with the Ministry of Health (MoH) of Timor-Leste and Catalpa International implemented a mobile phone-based mHealth program in 2013 known as Liga Inan (“Connecting Mothers”). Liga Inan was designed as a sustainable and scalable effort that would support MoH efforts to improve maternal and newborn health care-seeking and home practices. Key aims were to use mobile phone technology to improve communication between pregnant women and their MoH health providers and to increase optimal maternal health behaviors. MoH health staff registered pregnant women into Liga Inan at their first antenatal care (ANC) visit and followed them through pregnancy, delivery and six months postpartum. A web-based platform sent text messages twice weekly to promote safe pregnancy/delivery and facilitated phone communication between pregnant women and their MoH care providers.

Methods
For the program’s final evaluation, baseline (2012) and final (2015) surveys interviewed women in one intervention district and one adjacent control district who had given birth in the preceding two years. Primary outcomes were receiving four or more ANC visits, using skilled birth attendants, delivery in health facilities, and timely postnatal care.

Results
Multivariate analysis compared endline maternal health behav-iors for women in the intervention district compared to baseline and to women in the control district. Controlling for other factors, women in the intervention district had nearly twice the odds of having a skilled birth attendant and a facility delivery, nearly five times the odds of receiving a postpartum care visit within two days of delivery, and over five times the odds of having their newborn’s health checked within two days of birth. There was no significant association between Liga Inan exposure and re-ceipt of four or more ANC visits.Conclusions Liga Inan was associated with substantial increases in MoH health provider-assisted and facility-based births and timely post-natal care in Timor-Leste. These positive results led the MoH to incor-porate Liga Inan into the national maternal and child health program. To date the program has expanded to cover all 13 districts in the coun-try, with gradual assumption of management and financial responsibil-ity by the MoH under way.

 

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Our mission is to promote policies and support programs that strengthen government primary health care and foster social, economic, and health equity for all. Our vision is a just world that promotes health and well-being, including universal access to quality health care.

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Health Alliance International began in 1987 as a US-based international solidarity organization committed to supporting the public sector provision of health care for all.  Over 35 years, HAI conducted programs in 17 countries, with flagship programs in Mozambique, Côte d'Ivoire, and Timor-Leste.

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In line with HAI’s commitment to support and strengthen local public health leadership, as of October 2021, HAI fully transitioned global operations and active programs to locally-based, locally-led NGOs. Learn more about this shift toward local autonomy and equity in global health.

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