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ABSTRACT: Background
Obesity in childhood is a public health concern worldwide and mobile phone-based interventions (mHealth) has shown to facilitate obesity prevention. However, more research is needed on the implementation of digital tools in routine primary care. This study explored behavior change determinants for implementing a health promotion mHealth intervention (MINISTOP 2.0 app) targeting parents of 4-year-olds.Methods
Secondary data from telephone interviews (n = 15) with child health care nurses working within primary child healthcare in Sweden was analyzed using directed content analysis and the COM-B model.Results
Barriers for implementation included: limited knowledge about using technology and reservations about how and to what extent parents would use mHealth. Potential facilitators included nurses' openness to learn and try new tools, confidence in their role and engagement in reaching parents as well as beliefs that the app could improve practice by prompting dialogue and being a shared platform. Nurses expressed a strong professional identity and shared understanding of their practice, mechanisms that could potentially inhibit or facilitate implementation.Conclusions
Findings suggest cautious optimism regarding implementing mobile phone-based tools in child primary healthcare in terms of capability, opportunity and motivation among stakeholders. Implementation strategies such as educational outreach visits and making the intervention testable among stakeholders could further facilitate implementation in this clinical context. However, more research is needed on behavior change determinants in different stages of real-world implementation.
SUBMITTER: Thomas K
PROVIDER: S-EPMC10012784 | biostudies-literature | 2022
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Thomas Kristin K Neher Margit M Alexandrou Christina C Müssener Ulrika U Henriksson Hanna H Löf Marie M
Frontiers in health services 20221101
<h4>Background</h4>Obesity in childhood is a public health concern worldwide and mobile phone-based interventions (mHealth) has shown to facilitate obesity prevention. However, more research is needed on the implementation of digital tools in routine primary care. This study explored behavior change determinants for implementing a health promotion mHealth intervention (MINISTOP 2.0 app) targeting parents of 4-year-olds.<h4>Methods</h4>Secondary data from telephone interviews (<i>n</i> = 15) with ...[more]