Piloting a prenatal care smartphone application and care navigation intervention at a federally qualified health center

Given that smartphones are widely used among reproductive-age people of all socioeconomic backgrounds, a smartphone application may be a useful supplement to routine prenatal care.BACKGROUNDGiven that smartphones are widely used among reproductive-age people of all socioeconomic backgrounds, a smart...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of obstetrics & gynecology MFM 2023-10, Vol.5 (10), p.101135, Article 101135
Hauptverfasser: Vani, Kavita, Katehis, Ioanna, Bernstein, Peter S., Lebron-Reyes, Christine, Chung, Henry, Bruney, Talitha, Karkowsky, Chavi Eve
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Given that smartphones are widely used among reproductive-age people of all socioeconomic backgrounds, a smartphone application may be a useful supplement to routine prenatal care.BACKGROUNDGiven that smartphones are widely used among reproductive-age people of all socioeconomic backgrounds, a smartphone application may be a useful supplement to routine prenatal care.This study aimed to describe the implementation of a smartphone app that offers patient education, depression screening, social determinants of health screening, and care coordination as an adjunct to routine prenatal care at a federally qualified health center. We further sought to characterize app engagement and the association of app use with pregnancy outcomes.OBJECTIVEThis study aimed to describe the implementation of a smartphone app that offers patient education, depression screening, social determinants of health screening, and care coordination as an adjunct to routine prenatal care at a federally qualified health center. We further sought to characterize app engagement and the association of app use with pregnancy outcomes.The implementation of the smartphone app was a quality improvement initiative in which the app was made available to all people receiving prenatal care at a designated federally qualified health center between December 2020 and December 2021. Individuals who both initiated prenatal care at this site before 28 weeks of gestation and delivered at our institution during the above-defined period were studied retrospectively after obtaining institutional approval. Summary statistics were used to describe app implementation and information regarding social determinants of health and depression screening. Demographics and maternal and neonatal outcomes were compared between app enrollees and patients receiving prenatal care at the same site who were not enrolled in the app. Data were analyzed using the 2-sample t test to compare continuous variables and the chi-square test to compare categorical variables.STUDY DESIGNThe implementation of the smartphone app was a quality improvement initiative in which the app was made available to all people receiving prenatal care at a designated federally qualified health center between December 2020 and December 2021. Individuals who both initiated prenatal care at this site before 28 weeks of gestation and delivered at our institution during the above-defined period were studied retrospectively after obtaining institutional approval.
ISSN:2589-9333
2589-9333
DOI:10.1016/j.ajogmf.2023.101135