Using Text Messaging to Improve Access to Prenatal Health Information in Urban African American and Afro-Caribbean Immigrant Pregnant Women: Mixed Methods Analysis of Text4baby Usage

BackgroundThe Text4baby (T4B) mobile health (mHealth) program is acclaimed to provide pregnant women with greater access to prenatal health care, resources, and information. However, little is known about whether urban African American and Afro-Caribbean immigrant pregnant wo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Blackwell, Tenya M, Dill, LeConte J, Hoepner, Lori A, Geer, Laura A
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-02-01
Series:JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Online Access:http://mhealth.jmir.org/2020/2/e14737/
id doaj-7fb1ae78494147b583e4ab38ffe3e1e8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7fb1ae78494147b583e4ab38ffe3e1e82021-05-03T03:34:22ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR mHealth and uHealth2291-52222020-02-0182e1473710.2196/14737Using Text Messaging to Improve Access to Prenatal Health Information in Urban African American and Afro-Caribbean Immigrant Pregnant Women: Mixed Methods Analysis of Text4baby UsageBlackwell, Tenya MDill, LeConte JHoepner, Lori AGeer, Laura A BackgroundThe Text4baby (T4B) mobile health (mHealth) program is acclaimed to provide pregnant women with greater access to prenatal health care, resources, and information. However, little is known about whether urban African American and Afro-Caribbean immigrant pregnant women in the United States are receptive users of innovative health communication methods or of the cultural and systematic barriers that inhibit their behavioral intent to use T4B. ObjectiveThis study aimed to understand the lived experiences of urban African American and Afro-Caribbean immigrant pregnant women with accessing quality prenatal health care and health information; to assess usage of mHealth for seeking prenatal health information; and to measure changes in participants’ knowledge, perceptions, and behavioral intent to use the T4B mHealth educational intervention. MethodsAn exploratory sequential mixed methods study was conducted among pregnant women and clinical professionals for a phenomenological exploration with focus groups, key informants, interviews, and observations. Qualitative themes were aligned with behavioral and information technology communications theoretical constructs to develop a survey instrument used. repeated-measures pre- and post-test design to evaluate changes in participants’ knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs, of mHealth and T4B after a minimum of 4 weeks’ exposure to the text message–based intervention. Triangulation and mixing of both qualitative and quantitative data occurred primarily during the survey development and also during final analysis. ResultsA total of 9 women participated in phase 1, and 49 patients signed up for T4B and completed a 31-item survey at baseline and again during follow-up. Three themes were identified: (1) patient-provider engagement, (2) social support, and (3) acculturation. With time as a barrier to quality care, inadequate patient-provider engagement left participants feeling indifferent about the prenatal care and information they received in the clinical setting. Of 49 survey participants, 63% (31/49) strongly agreed that T4B would provide them with extra support during their pregnancy. On a Likert scale of 1 to 5, participants’ perception of the usefulness of T4B ranked at 4.26, and their perception of the compatibility and relative advantage of using T4B ranked at 4.41 and 4.15, respectively. At follow-up, there was a 14% increase in participants reporting their intent to use T4B and a 28% increase from pretest and posttest in pregnant women strongly agreeing to speak more with their doctor about the information learned through T4B. ConclusionsUrban African American and Afro-Caribbean immigrant pregnant women in Brooklyn endure a number of social and ecological determinants like low health literacy, income, and language that serve as barriers to accessing quality prenatal health care and information, which negatively impacts prenatal health behaviors and outcomes. Our study indicates a number of systematic, political, and other microsystem-level factors that perpetuate health inequities in our study population.http://mhealth.jmir.org/2020/2/e14737/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Blackwell, Tenya M
Dill, LeConte J
Hoepner, Lori A
Geer, Laura A
spellingShingle Blackwell, Tenya M
Dill, LeConte J
Hoepner, Lori A
Geer, Laura A
Using Text Messaging to Improve Access to Prenatal Health Information in Urban African American and Afro-Caribbean Immigrant Pregnant Women: Mixed Methods Analysis of Text4baby Usage
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
author_facet Blackwell, Tenya M
Dill, LeConte J
Hoepner, Lori A
Geer, Laura A
author_sort Blackwell, Tenya M
title Using Text Messaging to Improve Access to Prenatal Health Information in Urban African American and Afro-Caribbean Immigrant Pregnant Women: Mixed Methods Analysis of Text4baby Usage
title_short Using Text Messaging to Improve Access to Prenatal Health Information in Urban African American and Afro-Caribbean Immigrant Pregnant Women: Mixed Methods Analysis of Text4baby Usage
title_full Using Text Messaging to Improve Access to Prenatal Health Information in Urban African American and Afro-Caribbean Immigrant Pregnant Women: Mixed Methods Analysis of Text4baby Usage
title_fullStr Using Text Messaging to Improve Access to Prenatal Health Information in Urban African American and Afro-Caribbean Immigrant Pregnant Women: Mixed Methods Analysis of Text4baby Usage
title_full_unstemmed Using Text Messaging to Improve Access to Prenatal Health Information in Urban African American and Afro-Caribbean Immigrant Pregnant Women: Mixed Methods Analysis of Text4baby Usage
title_sort using text messaging to improve access to prenatal health information in urban african american and afro-caribbean immigrant pregnant women: mixed methods analysis of text4baby usage
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR mHealth and uHealth
issn 2291-5222
publishDate 2020-02-01
description BackgroundThe Text4baby (T4B) mobile health (mHealth) program is acclaimed to provide pregnant women with greater access to prenatal health care, resources, and information. However, little is known about whether urban African American and Afro-Caribbean immigrant pregnant women in the United States are receptive users of innovative health communication methods or of the cultural and systematic barriers that inhibit their behavioral intent to use T4B. ObjectiveThis study aimed to understand the lived experiences of urban African American and Afro-Caribbean immigrant pregnant women with accessing quality prenatal health care and health information; to assess usage of mHealth for seeking prenatal health information; and to measure changes in participants’ knowledge, perceptions, and behavioral intent to use the T4B mHealth educational intervention. MethodsAn exploratory sequential mixed methods study was conducted among pregnant women and clinical professionals for a phenomenological exploration with focus groups, key informants, interviews, and observations. Qualitative themes were aligned with behavioral and information technology communications theoretical constructs to develop a survey instrument used. repeated-measures pre- and post-test design to evaluate changes in participants’ knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs, of mHealth and T4B after a minimum of 4 weeks’ exposure to the text message–based intervention. Triangulation and mixing of both qualitative and quantitative data occurred primarily during the survey development and also during final analysis. ResultsA total of 9 women participated in phase 1, and 49 patients signed up for T4B and completed a 31-item survey at baseline and again during follow-up. Three themes were identified: (1) patient-provider engagement, (2) social support, and (3) acculturation. With time as a barrier to quality care, inadequate patient-provider engagement left participants feeling indifferent about the prenatal care and information they received in the clinical setting. Of 49 survey participants, 63% (31/49) strongly agreed that T4B would provide them with extra support during their pregnancy. On a Likert scale of 1 to 5, participants’ perception of the usefulness of T4B ranked at 4.26, and their perception of the compatibility and relative advantage of using T4B ranked at 4.41 and 4.15, respectively. At follow-up, there was a 14% increase in participants reporting their intent to use T4B and a 28% increase from pretest and posttest in pregnant women strongly agreeing to speak more with their doctor about the information learned through T4B. ConclusionsUrban African American and Afro-Caribbean immigrant pregnant women in Brooklyn endure a number of social and ecological determinants like low health literacy, income, and language that serve as barriers to accessing quality prenatal health care and information, which negatively impacts prenatal health behaviors and outcomes. Our study indicates a number of systematic, political, and other microsystem-level factors that perpetuate health inequities in our study population.
url http://mhealth.jmir.org/2020/2/e14737/
work_keys_str_mv AT blackwelltenyam usingtextmessagingtoimproveaccesstoprenatalhealthinformationinurbanafricanamericanandafrocaribbeanimmigrantpregnantwomenmixedmethodsanalysisoftext4babyusage
AT dilllecontej usingtextmessagingtoimproveaccesstoprenatalhealthinformationinurbanafricanamericanandafrocaribbeanimmigrantpregnantwomenmixedmethodsanalysisoftext4babyusage
AT hoepnerloria usingtextmessagingtoimproveaccesstoprenatalhealthinformationinurbanafricanamericanandafrocaribbeanimmigrantpregnantwomenmixedmethodsanalysisoftext4babyusage
AT geerlauraa usingtextmessagingtoimproveaccesstoprenatalhealthinformationinurbanafricanamericanandafrocaribbeanimmigrantpregnantwomenmixedmethodsanalysisoftext4babyusage
_version_ 1721484484310728704