scholarly journals 6.C. Workshop: Digitalizing maternal and child public health

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (Supplement_5) ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  

Abstract Digital Technologies have transformed many sectors in societies, and, increasingly, is changing the health care sector and health research. In comparison the potential of digital technologies in public health has been less explored. The workshop aims to address both the challenges and potentials of digital public health with focus on maternal and child public health. Presenters will provide examples of how digital technologies and digital health innovations can sustain and improve maternal and child health. The workshop presents three perspectives on digital maternal and child public health from different continents. This is a deliberate choice to highlight the universal and global relevance of digitalization in maternal and child public health. After the presentations, time is foreseen for a discussion on potential and limitations, as well as the generalizability of methods and results for maternal and child health globally, as well as on the question of governance in digital public health. The workshop topics will span from digital health information seeking to monitoring and the use of artificial intelligence for policy development. Each presentation covers a different technology or digital approach to public health. The presentations will critically explore how these technologies and approaches can improve public health from a local and global perspective, and will raise central issues, such as acceptance and availability of novel technologies, generalizability of results, governance and participatory approaches in the digital transformation in maternal and child health globally. Key messages Digital technologies can provide different impact for maternal and child public health depending on area of implementation, e.g. health promotion, policy development. Challenges and potentials range from specifically local and health-system related to globally generalizable factors.

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harolyn M. E. Belcher ◽  
Jacqueline D. Stone ◽  
Jenese A. McFadden ◽  
Tyler A. Hemmingson ◽  
Cary Kreutzer ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kayur Mehta ◽  
Sanjay Zodpey ◽  
Preetika Banerjee ◽  
Stephanie L. Pocius ◽  
Baldeep K. Dhaliwal ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundThe remarkable progress seen in maternal and child health (MCH) in India over the past two decades has been impacted by setbacks from the COVID-19 pandemic. We aimed to undertake a rapid assessment to identify key priorities for public health research in MCH in India within the context and aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.MethodsA web-based survey was developed to identify top research priorities in MCH. It consisted of 26 questions on six broad domains: vaccine preventable diseases, outbreak preparedness, primary healthcare integration, maternal health, neonatal health, and infectious diseases. Key stakeholders were invited to participate between September and November 2020. Participants assigned importance on a 5-point Likert scale, and assigned overall ranks to each sub-domain research priority. Descriptive statistics were used to examine Likert scale responses, and a ranking analysis was done to obtain an “average ranking score” and identify the top research priority under each domain.ResultsAmongst the 84 respondents, 37% were public-health researchers, 25% healthcare providers, 20% academic faculty and 13% were policy makers. Across the six domains, most respondents considered conducting research on systems strengthening as extremely important. The highest ranked research priorities were strengthening the public sector workforce (vaccine preventable diseases), enhancing public-health surveillance networks (outbreak preparedness), nutrition support through community workers (primary care integration), encouraging at least 4-8 antenatal visits (maternal health), neonatal resuscitation to reduce birth asphyxia (neonatal health) and pediatric and maternal screening and treatment of tuberculosis (infectious diseases). Common themes identified through open-ended questions were also systems strengthening priorities across domains.ConclusionsThe overall focus for research priorities in MCH in India during the COVID-19 pandemic is on strengthening existing services and service delivery, rather than novel research. Our results highlight pivotal steps within the roadmap for advancing and sustaining maternal and child health gains during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and beyond.


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