The impacts of an mHealth intervention targeting parents on health service usage and out‐of‐pocket costs in the first 9 months of life: The Growing healthy app

Author:

Laws Rachel A.1ORCID,Zheng Miaobing1ORCID,Brown Vicki2,Lymer Sharyn3,Campbell Karen J.1,Russell Catherine G.1,Taki Sarah45,Litterbach Eloise16,Ong Kok‐Leong7,Denney‐Wilson Elizabeth89

Affiliation:

1. School of Exercise and Nutrition Science, Institute for Physical Activity and Nutrition Deakin University Geelong VIC Australia

2. Deakin Health Economics, Institute for Health Transformation Deakin University Geelong VIC Australia

3. Biostatistics Consultant Sydney NSW Australia

4. Health Promotion Unit Population Health Research & Evaluation Hub, Sydney Local Health District Sydney NSW Australia

5. Sydney School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Sydney NSW Australia

6. Institute for Health Transformation, The Australian Centre for Behavioural Research in Diabetes Deakin University Geelong VIC Australia

7. Department of Information Systems and Business Analytics, AISSC RMIT University Melbourne VIC Australia

8. Susan Wakil School of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Sydney NSW Australia

9. Sydney Institute for Women, Children and their Families, Sydney Local Health District Sydney NSW Australia

Abstract

AbstractMobile health (mHealth) interventions provide a low‐cost, scalable approach to supporting parents with infant feeding advice with the potential to reduce health care visits and associated costs for infant feeding support. This Australian study examined the impact of the Growing healthy (GH) app on health service utilisation and out‐of‐pocket costs for families in the first 9 months of their infants life. A quasi‐experimental study with a comparison group was conducted in 2015–2016 with an mHealth intervention group (GH app, n = 301) and a nonrandomized usual care group (n = 344). The GH app aimed to support parents of young infants with healthy infant feeding behaviours from birth to 9 months of age. App‐generated notifications directed parents to age‐and feeding‐specific content within the app. Both groups completed surveys at baseline when infants were less than 3 months old (T1), at 6 months (T2) and 9 months (T3) of age. At T3, participants reported health services used and any out‐of‐pocket costs for advice on infant feeding, growth or activity. App users had lower odds (odds ratio: 0.38 95% confidence interval: 0.25, 0.59) of using one or more services and had lower number of visits to a general practitioner (1.0 vs. 1.5 visits, p = 0.003) and paediatrician (0.3 vs. 0.4 visits, p = 0.049) compared to the usual care group. There was no difference in out‐of‐pocket costs between groups. Provision of an evidenced‐based infant feeding app may provide substantial savings to the health system and potentially to parents through fewer primary health care and paediatrician visits.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference26 articles.

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