PROJECT SUMMARY
Background: Antenatal care (ANC) is a mainstay of preventing maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality
but utilization of these services in Uganda remains low. Consequently, maternal and perinatal mortality rates
are among the highest in the world. Short message service (SMS) and other mobile health (mHealth)
interventions have been proposed to promote positive health behavior and strengthen informed decision-
making for women in the perinatal period. Such interventions are hypothesized to improve outcomes through
knowledge transfer and strengthened access to social support. However, few evaluations of mHealth
interventions to improve maternal care have been conducted in sub-Saharan Africa, where social and
contextual factors that drive successful interventions differ, and the public health impact of such interventions is
likely to be great. Few studies have also examined theory-informed methods to develop interventions to
maximize end-user acceptability. Candidate: I am a lecturer at Mbarara University of Science and Technology
with basic training in epidemiology, research methods and data analysis, resulting in 12 publications (6 first-
authored). I am applying for this K43 award to secure training and mentorship in developing and adopting low
cost, context-specific novel interventions to improve maternal-child health in low resource settings. Mentoring:
To accomplish this goal, I have identified a strong mentorship team with expertise in reproductive health (Drs.
Matthews & Mugyenyi), mHealth, methodology and epidemiology (Dr. Siedner), qualitative methods (Dr.
Ware), career development and project implementation (Professor. Obua). Leveraging this strong team of
multidisciplinary mentors and formal didactics in the identified focus areas of training will enable me to obtain
requisite skills and hands-on experience to inform, design, adopt and test novel intervention strategies to
improve maternal-child health in low resource settings. Training: I require additional experience, mentorship
and training in: 1) qualitative methods to elicit end-user feedback for development of interventions, 2)
technology acceptance for patient-centered intervention development and evaluation, and 3) experimental
study designs to evaluate interventions in pregnant women. Research: I propose to 1) conduct a qualitative
study to identify barriers and facilitators to women’s engagement in ANC, decisions to deliver in health
facilities, and characterize their preferences for an mHealth-based, social support intervention; 2) develop and
iteratively evaluate the intervention based on these qualitative results; 3) pilot test the intervention to assess
feasibility, acceptability and preliminary efficacy to improve ANC utilization and skilled births. This training and
results will position me to write an R01 application in year 5 of this award to evaluate the effectiveness of an
mHealth-based social support intervention compared to routine care to improve maternal and child health
outcomes in Uganda. My ultimate goal is to become an independent investigator, with expertise in
development and evaluation of culturally informed solutions to reduce maternal-child mortality.