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'We did everything by phone' : a qualitative study of mothers' experience of smartphone-aided screening of cerebral palsy in Kathmandu, Nepal

Kukka Antti J.; Bhattarai Pratiksha; Sundelin Heléne E. K.; Gurung Rejina; Brown Nick J. W.; Litorp Helena; Axelin Anna; KC Ashish

'We did everything by phone' : a qualitative study of mothers' experience of smartphone-aided screening of cerebral palsy in Kathmandu, Nepal

Kukka Antti J.
Bhattarai Pratiksha
Sundelin Heléne E. K.
Gurung Rejina
Brown Nick J. W.
Litorp Helena
Axelin Anna
KC Ashish
Katso/Avaa
s12887-024-04829-5.pdf (1001.Kb)
Lataukset: 

BioMed Central
doi:10.1186/s12887-024-04829-5
URI
https://bmcpediatr.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12887-024-04829-5
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025082792499
Tiivistelmä

Background
International guidelines recommend early intervention to all children at risk of cerebral palsy, but targeted screening programs are often lacking in low- and middle-income settings with the highest burden of disease. Smartphone applications have the potential to improve access to early diagnostics by empowering parents to film their children at home followed by centralized evaluation of videos with General Movements Assessment. We explored mothers’ perceptions about participating in a smartphone aided cerebral palsy screening program in Kathmandu, Nepal.

Methods
This is an explorative qualitative study that used focus group discussions (n = 2) and individual interviews (n = 4) with mothers of term-born infants surviving birth asphyxia or neonatal seizures. Parents used the NeuroMotion™ smartphone app to film their children at home and the videos were analysed using Precthl’s General Movements Assessment. Sekhon et al.’s framework on the acceptability of health care interventions guided the design of the group discussions and interviews, and the deductive qualitative content analysis.

Results
Mothers were interested in engaging with the programme and expressed hope it would benefit their children. Most felt using the app was intuitive. They were, however, unclear about the way the analysis was performed. Support from the research team was often needed to overcome an initial lack of self-confidence in using the technology, and to reduce anxiety related to the follow-up. The intervention was overall perceived as recommendable but should be supplemented by a face-to-face consultation.

Conclusion
Smartphone aided remote screening of cerebral palsy is acceptable in a lower middle-income population but requires additional technical support.

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