Evaluation of a Text Messaging Intervention to Support Self-Management of Diabetes During Pregnancy Among Low-Income, Minority Women: Qualitative Study

BackgroundGiven the growing burden of diabetes in underserved communities and the complexity of diabetes self-management during pregnancy, the development of interventions to support low-income pregnant women with diabetes is urgently needed. ObjectiveThis study a...

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Main Authors: Yee, Lynn, Taylor, Shaneah, Young, Maria, Williams, Makayla, Niznik, Charlotte, Simon, Melissa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-08-01
Series:JMIR Diabetes
Online Access:http://diabetes.jmir.org/2020/3/e17794/
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spelling doaj-f130029ed0c7485b9fec1df41e8815112021-04-02T21:36:35ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Diabetes2371-43792020-08-0153e1779410.2196/17794Evaluation of a Text Messaging Intervention to Support Self-Management of Diabetes During Pregnancy Among Low-Income, Minority Women: Qualitative StudyYee, LynnTaylor, ShaneahYoung, MariaWilliams, MakaylaNiznik, CharlotteSimon, Melissa BackgroundGiven the growing burden of diabetes in underserved communities and the complexity of diabetes self-management during pregnancy, the development of interventions to support low-income pregnant women with diabetes is urgently needed. ObjectiveThis study aims to develop and pilot test a theory-driven curriculum of SMS text messaging for diabetes support and education during pregnancy. MethodsThis was a prospective pilot investigation of a novel SMS text messaging intervention offered to pregnant women with pregestational or gestational diabetes mellitus and publicly funded prenatal care. Prior work yielded a conceptual model of diabetes self-management barriers and support factors in this population, which was used to guide curriculum development along with health behavior theories. Participants received three supportive or educational one-way text messages per week during pregnancy. In-depth semistructured interviews were performed at study exit to solicit feedback on the program. Narrative data were analyzed using the constant comparative technique to identify themes and subthemes. ResultsParticipants (N=31 enrolled and n=26 completed both interviews) consistently reported that SMS text messaging provided enhanced motivation for diabetes self-care, reduced diabetes-related social isolation, increased perceived diabetes-associated knowledge, enhanced comfort with the health care team, and reduced logistical burdens of diabetes during pregnancy. Participants requested enhanced interactive and customizable features in future intervention iterations. ConclusionsPregnant women with diabetes who were enrolled in this pilot study of an SMS text messaging curriculum for diabetes support described enhanced motivation, knowledge, and comfort with diabetes self-care activities as a result of the health education intervention. The next steps include enriching the interactive features of the intervention and investigating the effect of the intervention on perinatal outcomes.http://diabetes.jmir.org/2020/3/e17794/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yee, Lynn
Taylor, Shaneah
Young, Maria
Williams, Makayla
Niznik, Charlotte
Simon, Melissa
spellingShingle Yee, Lynn
Taylor, Shaneah
Young, Maria
Williams, Makayla
Niznik, Charlotte
Simon, Melissa
Evaluation of a Text Messaging Intervention to Support Self-Management of Diabetes During Pregnancy Among Low-Income, Minority Women: Qualitative Study
JMIR Diabetes
author_facet Yee, Lynn
Taylor, Shaneah
Young, Maria
Williams, Makayla
Niznik, Charlotte
Simon, Melissa
author_sort Yee, Lynn
title Evaluation of a Text Messaging Intervention to Support Self-Management of Diabetes During Pregnancy Among Low-Income, Minority Women: Qualitative Study
title_short Evaluation of a Text Messaging Intervention to Support Self-Management of Diabetes During Pregnancy Among Low-Income, Minority Women: Qualitative Study
title_full Evaluation of a Text Messaging Intervention to Support Self-Management of Diabetes During Pregnancy Among Low-Income, Minority Women: Qualitative Study
title_fullStr Evaluation of a Text Messaging Intervention to Support Self-Management of Diabetes During Pregnancy Among Low-Income, Minority Women: Qualitative Study
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of a Text Messaging Intervention to Support Self-Management of Diabetes During Pregnancy Among Low-Income, Minority Women: Qualitative Study
title_sort evaluation of a text messaging intervention to support self-management of diabetes during pregnancy among low-income, minority women: qualitative study
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Diabetes
issn 2371-4379
publishDate 2020-08-01
description BackgroundGiven the growing burden of diabetes in underserved communities and the complexity of diabetes self-management during pregnancy, the development of interventions to support low-income pregnant women with diabetes is urgently needed. ObjectiveThis study aims to develop and pilot test a theory-driven curriculum of SMS text messaging for diabetes support and education during pregnancy. MethodsThis was a prospective pilot investigation of a novel SMS text messaging intervention offered to pregnant women with pregestational or gestational diabetes mellitus and publicly funded prenatal care. Prior work yielded a conceptual model of diabetes self-management barriers and support factors in this population, which was used to guide curriculum development along with health behavior theories. Participants received three supportive or educational one-way text messages per week during pregnancy. In-depth semistructured interviews were performed at study exit to solicit feedback on the program. Narrative data were analyzed using the constant comparative technique to identify themes and subthemes. ResultsParticipants (N=31 enrolled and n=26 completed both interviews) consistently reported that SMS text messaging provided enhanced motivation for diabetes self-care, reduced diabetes-related social isolation, increased perceived diabetes-associated knowledge, enhanced comfort with the health care team, and reduced logistical burdens of diabetes during pregnancy. Participants requested enhanced interactive and customizable features in future intervention iterations. ConclusionsPregnant women with diabetes who were enrolled in this pilot study of an SMS text messaging curriculum for diabetes support described enhanced motivation, knowledge, and comfort with diabetes self-care activities as a result of the health education intervention. The next steps include enriching the interactive features of the intervention and investigating the effect of the intervention on perinatal outcomes.
url http://diabetes.jmir.org/2020/3/e17794/
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