Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this cluster randomized controlled trial is to study the effect of a mobile-phone based application used by pregnant women on maternal and newborn health indicators. The main objective is to compare the rates of institutional deliveries in the intervention and control arms. Ancillary objectives are to compare the birth-preparedness and complication readiness parameters, severe maternal morbidity rates and neonatal adverse outcomes rates in the two arms. The participants are pregnant women. In the intervention arm pregnant women will be given a smart mobile phone with an application that they will use to input information related to their health. This information can be shared with their healthcare workers. The healthcare workers will also be able to access all the health-related details of the pregnant women and mothers under their care by accessing this app in their mobile phones and be in touch with their patients through the mobile phone application. The control arm will adhere to existing practices of pregnant woman and health worker communication without the use of a smart mobile phone with an existing application. Records related to the pregnant woman will be kept in paper-based forms as is the usual norm. The investigators will compare the intervention arm and the control arm to see if there are differences in the rates of the outcomes.


Clinical Trial Description

Improving maternal and newborn health requires innovative approaches that are flexible and cater to the need of the end-user, the patient. In the recent years telecommunication services that have seamlessly entered the lives of the both providers and receivers of health care both in developing and underdeveloped nations and have been a fertile ground for such innovations. There has been rapid growth of the use of mobile phone technologies (mobile health/mHealth) in low and middle income countries (LMICs). These function predominantly in the areas of client education and behavior change communication, registries and vital event tracking, data collection and reporting, provider to provider communication and electronic health records. In our setting as well, there has been successful implementation of the electronic medical records at health facility level and community based institutions and mobile health applications for the community level health providers. The major users of these digital platforms are service providers rather than patients. However, using electronic medical records that a pregnant woman and/or a mother can fill up at home may provide more opportunities to identify risks and practices that reflect the real situation better than surveys or registries which rely on recall. So far, there is no such intervention in our setting to incorporate the users as the direct data keepers in the health system. Also, there is lack of evidence on the benefit of such applications for maternal and child health. Therefore, we are conducting a cluster randomized controlled trial on user based advanced data systems to improve health in early life in rural Nepal. The intervention will be evaluated using a cluster randomized controlled trial design. The rationale is that the intervention is applied to the entire community and individual randomization is not feasible due to contamination. A rural municipality ward, the lowest administrative level in Nepal, will be randomized into intervention or control cluster. Because of the nature of the intervention, allocation is not masked. This project will be carried out in three rural municipalities of southern Lalitpur District, namely Konjyosom, Mahankal and Bagmati Rural Municipalities. Eighteen wards or clusters, nine(9) in the intervention arm and nine(9) in the control arm are included. The investigators will implement the mobile-phone based system in the intervention clusters while non-intervention clusters will have the currently existing health care data management and patient contact system. In the intervention arm, a data-system with mobile phone-based application will be deployed. The application will be used by pregnant women to obtain useful information related to their pregnancy and also enter vital information related to their health. The database will be accessible to healthcare providers at various levels of our health system such as health posts, and district or municipal level hospitals. The healthcare providers will also be able to access the data and enter clinical information when the pregnant women go to the health centre. The application will also be used during the time of labour and after delivery to record information about the post-partum state and infancy of the newborn child. The investigators will carry out a prospective follow-up in which all institutional/home deliveries, birth preparedness and complication readiness parameters, severe maternal morbidity, neonatal adverse outcomes, stillbirths, neonatal and later infant deaths and deaths of women in the study population are recorded through interviews conducted during the recruitment, at 6-9 months of pregnancy, right after delivery and at 42 days after delivery. This study is led by Patan Academy of Health Sciences, Lalitpur, Nepal in collaboration with Purbanchal University, Lalitpur, Nepal. The investigators have received a grant from University Grants Commission, Nepal for this project. The investigators have signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the three rural municipalities of southern Lalitpur namely, Bagmati, Konjyosom and Mahankal Rural Municipalities and plan to work in close liaison with the Ministry of Health, Department of Health Services, Health Office for Lalitpur District and Government Integrated Data centre (GIDC) to undertake this project. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05697822
Study type Interventional
Source Patan Academy of Health Sciences
Contact Amit Arjyal, MBBS, DPhil
Phone +9779864478329
Email amitarjyal@pahs.edu.np
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date March 2023
Completion date December 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05555095 - Examining Digital Health Care Delivery Models Through Medicaid Collaborative
Completed NCT04089800 - Using a Mobile Phone-based Multimedia Technology to Support Maternal Health in Rural Southwestern Uganda N/A
Completed NCT04208867 - Quality Improvement Project for Reproductive Health Services in India, Phase 1 N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05910580 - Improving Alcohol and Substance Use Care Access, Outcome, Equity During the Reproductive Years N/A
Recruiting NCT03256591 - Implementation of HBB Training With Facilitators That Have Undergone Simulation Methodology Training N/A
Recruiting NCT03228875 - Boston Birth Cohort Study
Completed NCT02400671 - Mobile Strategies for Women's and Children's Health: Optimizing Adherence and Efficacy of PMTCT/ART N/A
Recruiting NCT05916534 - We Care About Brooklyn - A Digital Behavioral Intervention to Optimize Engagement in Maternal Healthcare N/A
Recruiting NCT05119166 - International Milk Composition (IMiC) Consortium
Recruiting NCT05154331 - Antenatal and Postnatal Care Research Collective - Household Survey (ARCH)
Recruiting NCT05716178 - Effectiveness of Trained Religious Leaders' Engagement in Maternal Health Education in Ethiopia N/A
Completed NCT02620436 - Impact Evaluation of Maternity Homes Access in Zambia N/A
Completed NCT01802957 - Health Facility Networking for Maternal Health N/A
Completed NCT01006317 - Intervention on Maternal Health Care in Rural China N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT06085105 - Caring for Providers to Improve Patient Experience (CPIPE) Trial N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05763537 - Understanding the Role of Doulas in Supporting People With PMADs N/A
Recruiting NCT05924633 - A Study of a Dietary Supplement in Breastfeeding Mothers (WellFed) N/A
Recruiting NCT05484804 - Accountability for Care Through Undoing Racism & Equity for Moms N/A
Completed NCT02517008 - The Impact of Non-monetary Incentives on Facility Delivery in Rural Zambia N/A
Recruiting NCT05389501 - Intervention to Improve Social Policy for Maternal and Child Health N/A