Explore UAB

Center for Women's Reproductive Health

Center for Women's Reproductive Health coordinates multicenter Health Equity Research Network grant

The Center for Women's Reproductive Health (CWRH) is honored to coordinate the multicenter Health Equity Research Network (HERN) on Disparities in Maternal-Infant Health Outcomes grant sponsored by the American Heart Association.

Project Setting

Our five-year study will be conducted in Northwest Cameroon, across nineteen districts. We selected Cameroon, because Cameroon has a high maternal mortality ratio of 600/100,000 births, and a perinatal mortality rate of ~50-60/1,000 births, among the highest worldwide. Also, Cameroon has expanding mobile phone coverage making it an ideal low-income country in which to evaluate m-MIST to improve pregnancy outcomes. Cameroon is classified by the World Health Organization (WHO) as having a critical shortage of healthcare personnel and equipment, exacerbated in rural areas (where most of the population reside), making it a high priority site to implement and test interventions that aim to improve maternity related outcomes.

Study Design

We will conduct a pragmatic stepped wedged cluster-randomized controlled trial to compare outcomes with and without m-MIST. The nineteen health districts in northwest Cameroon (65,000 total annual deliveries) will serve as clusters.

Potential Impact

If successful, this mHealth intervention will be a powerful tool enabling providers in low-income settings to deliver improved pregnancy care. Because the m-MIST intervention leverages existing infrastructure, is efficacious, the m-MIST intervention will be easily scalable to other regions in Cameroon and other low-income countries in Sub Saharan Africa, as well as to other health disciplines (e.g. internal medicine or surgery). We anticipate that implementation of m-MIST will lead to improved maternal and newborn outcomes and ultimately to improved population health and survival.

Contact Information

Alan Tita, MD, PhD
John C. Hauth Endowed Professor of Obstetrics & Gynecology,
Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine
Vice-Chair for Research, Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine
atita@uabmc.edu

Latest Headlines

  • Infusion nurse uses mom’s cancer journey as motivation in her nursing career
    Kallie McDonald says following her heart and passion put her in a position to help women suffering from the same illness as her mom.
  • Seeing double? UAB delivers second set of rare double uterus “twins”
    Two Alabama women with the same one-in-a-million pregnancy deliver healthy “twins” at UAB Hospital less than two months apart.
  • Scarinci selected to lead national cervical cancer elimination workgroup
    Scarinci will lead a workgroup devoted to developing a road map to eliminating cervical cancer in the United States.