Mobile Health Intervention to Promote Positive Infant Health Outcomes in Guatemala
- Conditions
- Infant Development
- Interventions
- Behavioral: printed caregiving materialsBehavioral: smartphone application to promote nurturing care
- Registration Number
- NCT05106894
- Lead Sponsor
- Children's Hospital Los Angeles
- Brief Summary
Promoting optimal development for children at risk in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is an important global health priority. Supporting caregivers to provide nurturing care is an evidence-based strategy, however feasibility of scaling-up this supporting is limited by competing demands on health workers' time. For infant development, mHealth technologies have the potential to solve this problem by providing tailored content directly to caregivers, involving and empowering them to promote infant development, promoting and facilitating interactions with health workers when areas of concern are identified and, therefore, expanding the reach of healthcare systems. This overall study is designed to explore this idea, by designing a caregiver-directed smartphone application to directly engage first-time caregivers in rural Guatemala in providing nurturing care and, after design, to conduct a prospective implementation trial of its use followed by an adequately-powered efficacy study.
- Detailed Description
Rationale: According to recent estimates, 43% of children under age 5 residing in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs)-250 million children in total-are at risk of not reaching their developmental potential due to living in environments with malnutrition, poverty, and lack of early stimulation. Mobile health (mHealth) technology represents an efficient strategy for scaling interventions to promote infant development.
Intervention: Pilot randomized controlled trial of mHealth application compared to paper caregiving materials. Length of intervention = 6 months.
Objectives and purpose: We will test a smartphone application that will directly engage caregivers in providing nurturing care to at-risk infants. We will assess effectiveness of the mHealth application compared to paper caregiving materials by establishing effect sizes of group differences in Bayley scores after 6 months.
Study population: parents of newborn infants, newborn infants.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 94
- first-time caregivers with an infant in the eligible age range (0-4 weeks)
- infant from singleton birth
- infant from full-term (> 37 weeks gestation) birth
- Presence of acute malnutrition/wasting or severe medical illness (heart disease, kidney disease, congenital abnormality) in the infant
- medical need for supplementation of breastfeeding
- caregiver not literate
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description printed caregiving materials printed caregiving materials caregivers will receive print materials on early childhood stimulation smartphone application to promote nurturing care smartphone application to promote nurturing care a caregiver-directed smartphone application will directly engage first-time caregivers in providing nurturing care
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Effect size of group differences in Bayley scores after 6 months 6 months Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development (3rd edition). Scores are norm-referenced based on age. Higher scores are better.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Wuqu' Kawoq/ Maya Health Alliance
🇬🇹Chimaltenango, Guatemala