Population mobility is frequent in South Africa and disrupts the continuity of HIV care. Postpartum, HIV-positive women are at elevated risk of dropping out of HIV care and are highly mobile. This pilot study aims to engage peripartum, HIV-positive women as potential users to evaluate a novel smartphone application to assist these women with linkage to new HIV facilities and prospectively describe the mobility of this population.
South Africa is home to the world's largest antiretroviral therapy (ART) program, but sustaining high retention along the HIV care continuum has proven challenging in the country and throughout the wider region. Population mobility is frequent in South Africa and mobility likely disrupts retention in HIV care. In the absence of a facility-linked national electronic health data system, clinic switching as unreported transfers also obscures the true magnitude of loss to follow-up, hindering national evaluation efforts. Postpartum women in South Africa are known to be at high risk of dropping out of HIV care after delivery and are frequently mobile, partly due to cultural traditions of returning to one's rural home after giving birth. To address these challenges to retention in care, the investigators will enroll 30 peripartum, HIV-positive women as potential users to assess the acceptability and feasibility of deploying in a real-world setting a novel mHealth application to improve retention in HIV care. The app will operate on users' own smartphones and will serve two primary functions: 1) as a service tool to inform postpartum, HIV-positive women of ART services in their area so that they may access continued HIV care, even while traveling, and 2) as a research tool to prospectively characterize travel and mobility patterns of these women. During this pilot study, women will be passively followed for 90 days following app installation at enrollment. After 90 days, they will be interviewed to determine acceptability and feasibility, and electronic user data will be analyzed. This information will be used to develop an app poised for nationwide adoption. The research team comprises leaders in the study of HIV implementation science, maternal/child health and biomedical informatics, with experience designing effective mobile health (mHealth) interventions in low-resources settings. This pilot study aims to engage potential users to test a smartphone application that both improves linkage to HIV care and provides essential research data to inform future health system strengthening efforts.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DEVICE_FEASIBILITY
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
4
CareConekta is a smartphone app developed in parallel with a series of focus group discussions that uses global positioning system (GPS) data to identify the user's location to meet two primary functions: (1) to allow the participant to locate ART facilities in South Africa that are near her current location, and (2) to trace mobility prospectively.
Gugulethu Community Health Centre
Cape Town, South Africa
Feasibility questionnaire
Feasibility will be assessed via a face-to-face questionnaire to address the following questions: * What proportion of women eligible to participate chooses to participate in the study? * Are participants able to install the app on their phones? * How does real-world access to the internet affect the use of the app? * When is the optimal time for the participant to receive a notification? * How many notifications are sent? * What unexpected problems occurred? * What are the general usage patterns of the app?
Time frame: 3 months
Acceptability questionnaire
Acceptability will be assessed via a face-to-face questionnaire to address the following questions: * Do women find the app helpful? * How frequently do women engage with the app and under what circumstances? * Do women report that they think such an app should be offered to other pregnant women? What about to non-pregnant adults? * Are there other services that participants would like to see included on future version of the app? * Do women like the notifications?
Time frame: 3 months
Medical record review to assess potential efficacy
The investigators will assess paper and electronic medical records to assess if the receipt of a notification results in linkage to a facility, as recorded through self-report and patient records.
Time frame: 3 months
Spatial analysis of GPS data
The investigators will analyze the GPS data collected in during the pilot study to determine the characteristics of peripartum women's mobility patterns.
Time frame: 3 months
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