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Impact of a Mobile Health Breastfeeding Counseling Intervention for Employed Mothers in Kenya

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Breastfeeding, Exclusive
Interventions
Behavioral: mobile Health Breastfeeding Counseling
Behavioral: Standard of care breastfeeding counseling
Registration Number
NCT05618288
Lead Sponsor
Wheaton College
Brief Summary

Exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) is critical for child survival, growth, and maternal health; however, over half of mothers in low and middle-income countries (LMIC). Mobile health (mHealth) describes a range of wireless technologies and techniques that seek to increase patient access to and interaction with preventive health services. This study will develop and test the feasibility of an mHealth intervention to improve support counseling for breastfeeding at a large sub-county referral hospital in Naivasha, Kenya.

Detailed Description

Exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) is critical for child survival, growth, and maternal health; however, over half of mothers in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) do not practice EBF through the recommended six months of infancy. Maternal employment is a significant risk factor for early cessation of EBF in LMICs. Policies in Kenya seek to support working mothers to continue practicing EBF after a nationally mandated 12-week maternity leave. However, the implementation of this policy is limited, and only 17% of formally employed mothers practice EBF through the recommended six months in Naivasha, Kenya, where a high proportion of mothers are employed in commercial agriculture and other low-wage industries.

Mobile health (mHealth) describes a range of wireless technologies and techniques that seek to increase patient access to and interaction with preventive health services. mHealth technologies hold untapped potential to support healthcare workers' training and counseling approaches to support lactation for working mothers, especially when collaboratively developed with end users.

This study will develop and test the feasibility of an mHealth intervention to improve support counseling for breastfeeding at a large sub-county referral hospital in Naivasha, Kenya. The primary objective of this proposal is to develop mHealth technology to equip and support healthcare worker breastfeeding counseling, and implement and evaluate its impact. We hypothesize that a culturally sensitive and technologically appropriate mHealth counseling intervention will improve EBF rates among infants of employed mothers. This study will be conducted in three aims:

Before the clinical trial phase of the study begins, we will employ a human-centered design approach to iteratively develop and test the feasibility of an mHealth intervention to support breastfeeding counseling for employed mothers.

After developing the technology, we will evaluate the impact of the mHealth breastfeeding counseling intervention on the outcomes of EBF, child morbidity, and worker presenteeism.

The overarching goal of this proposal is to develop an mHealth intervention that can successfully support continued lactation and BF for employed mothers across various sectors and be disseminated at a national scale in Kenya and other LMIC contexts where employed mothers face unique challenges to practicing EBF while maintaining employment.

Mothers will be recruited in the third trimester of pregnancy and followed through 9-months postpartum. 284 mothers will be randomly assigned to an mHealth counseling intervention or the Standard of Care (in person counseling at the Naivasha Sub-County Referral Hospital). there will be 142 mothers in each intervention arm.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
284
Inclusion Criteria
  • Mothers over 18 years who are employed in contract-based labor in sectors that include education, business, healthcare, commercial agriculture, tourism/food service.
  • Mothers must reside in the greater Naivasha, Kenya area and receive maternal and child health care at the Naivasha sub-County Referral Hospital.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Mothers of infants with cleft deformities or other abnormalities that interfere with breastfeeding.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
mobile Health (mHealth)mobile Health Breastfeeding CounselingSimple messaging service counseling intervention with healthcare providers. This arm will involve two-way messaging with healthcare providers Unstructured Supplementary Service Data application that provides session-based interaction with breastfeeding and lactation support content.
Standard of CareStandard of care breastfeeding counselingStandard of care breastfeeding counseling. The ongoing antenatal, delivery and postnatal breastfeeding and lactation counseling that is provided by the Naivasha sub-County Referral Hospital.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Exclusive breastfeeding at 24 weeks24 weeks post-partum

The proportion of mothers who feed only breastmilk to their infants, without other liquids, formula or semi-solid or solid food.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Continued breastfeeding36 weeks post partum

Any breastfeeding in the past 24 hours

Early initiation of breastfeedingWithin 1 hour of childbirth

Breastfeeding within 1 hour of childbirth

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