Acceptability and feasibility of a mobile health application for enhancing public private mix for TB care among healthcare Workers in Southwestern Uganda.

BMC digital health Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-03-03 DOI:10.1186/s44247-023-00009-0
Wilson Tumuhimbise, Daniel Atwine, Fred Kaggwa, Angella Musiimenta
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Abstract

Background: Mobile health interventions can potentially enhance public-private linkage for tuberculosis care. However, evidence about their acceptability and feasibility is lacking. This study sought to assess the initial acceptability and feasibility of a mobile health application for following up on presumptive tuberculosis patients referred from private to public hospitals. Twenty-two healthcare workers from three private hospitals and a public hospital in southwestern Uganda received the Tuuka mobile application for 1 month for testing. Testing focused on referring patients by healthcare workers from private hospitals and receiving referred patients by public healthcare workers and sending SMS reminders to the referred patients by filling out the digital referral forms inbuilt within the app. Study participants participated in qualitative semi-structured in-depth interviews on the acceptability and feasibility of this app. An inductive, content analytic approach, framed by the unified theory of acceptance and use of technology model, was used to analyze qualitative data. Quantitative feasibility metrics and the quantitative assessment of acceptability were analyzed descriptively using STATA.

Results: Healthcare workers found the Tuuka application acceptable and feasible, with a mean total system usability scale score of 98 (SD 1.97). The majority believed that the app would help them make quicker medical decisions (91%), communicate with other healthcare workers (96%), facilitate partnerships with other hospitals (100%), and enhance quick TB case notification (96%). The application was perceived to be useful in reminding referred patients to adhere to referral appointments, notifying public hospital healthcare workers about the incoming referred patients, facilitating communication across facilities, and enhancing patient-based care.

Conclusion: The Tuuka mobile health application is acceptable and feasible for following up on referred presumptive tuberculosis patients referred from private to public hospitals in southwestern Uganda. Future efforts should focus on incorporating incentives to motivate and enable sustained use among healthcare workers.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s44247-023-00009-0.

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移动医疗应用程序的可接受性和可行性,以加强乌干达西南部卫生保健工作者的公私混合结核病治疗
背景:流动卫生干预措施可以潜在地加强结核病治疗的公私联系。然而,缺乏证据证明它们的可接受性和可行性。本研究旨在评估一种移动医疗应用程序的初步可接受性和可行性,用于跟踪从私立医院转介到公立医院的推定结核病患者。来自乌干达西南部三家私立医院和一所公立医院的22名卫生保健工作者接受了为期1个月的Tuuka移动应用程序测试。测试的重点是由私立医院的医护人员转诊患者,由公立医护人员接收转诊患者,并通过填写应用程序内置的数字转诊表向转诊患者发送短信提醒。研究参与者参与了关于该应用程序的可接受性和可行性的定性半结构化深度访谈。在技术接受与使用统一理论模型框架下,对定性数据进行分析。采用STATA对定量可行性指标和可接受性定量评估进行了描述性分析。结果:医护人员认为Tuuka应用程序是可接受和可行的,系统可用性量表平均总分为98分(SD 1.97)。大多数人认为该应用程序可以帮助他们更快地做出医疗决定(91%),与其他医护人员沟通(96%),促进与其他医院的合作(100%),并加强快速结核病病例通知(96%)。该应用程序被认为在提醒转诊患者遵守转诊预约、通知公立医院医护人员有关即将到来的转诊患者、促进各设施之间的沟通以及加强以患者为基础的护理方面非常有用。结论:Tuuka移动健康应用程序对乌干达西南部私立医院转诊到公立医院的疑似结核病患者进行随访是可接受和可行的。未来的努力应侧重于纳入激励措施,以激励和使卫生保健工作者能够持续使用。补充信息:在线版本包含补充资料,提供地址为10.1186/s44247-023-00009-0。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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