Article from the Journal of Health Communication: International Perspectives
This study provides some baseline results in terms of the opportunity for use of SMS by rural midwives to effectively record rural pregnancy rates.
mFHAST Implications: Evaluation metrics that may be applicable to further mFHAST use cases and studies include SMS transmission success rates, accuracy of reports, predictors of successful transmission and user satisfaction.
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An article from the Journal of Medical Internet Research
Background posted in PubMed: "Pregnancy and the postpartum period provide windows of opportunity to impact perinatal and lifelong preventive health behavior for women and their families, but these opportunities are often missed. Understanding racial/ethnic differences in information and communication technology (ICT) use could inform technology-based interventions in diverse populations."
mFHAST Implications: Cultural differences in use of SMS for pregnancy-related communications
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An article from the Journal of Medical Internet Research
From the PubMed article abstract: "Postpartum depression (PPD) is the most common medical problem among new mothers that can have a negative impact on infant health. Traditional treatments are often difficult for low-income mothers to complete, particularly given the numerous barriers families face."
mFHAST Implications: Methods for decreasing postpartum depression through use of SMS messages
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An article from the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
From the article abstract: "Trivalent influenza vaccine (TIV) has been recommended for pregnant women in Australia for more than a decade and funded since 2009, yet vaccination coverage remains low. Misperceptions of the safety of TIV in pregnancy have been identified as a major contributor to low vaccination rates. Ongoing safety monitoring with dissemination of results could help improve antenatal influenza vaccine uptake."
mFHAST Implications: Opportunity for use of SMS for pregnancy related vaccination adverse event reporting
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An article from Global Health Science and Practice: doi: 10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00155
From the article objectives:
To determine the difference in delivery success of health messages delivered through pushed SMS, pushed voice messages sent to personal phones, and voice messages retrieved from a community phone (“retrieved voice messaging”), as well as the difference in quality of the user experience.
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