Perspectives of Adolescents, Parents, Service Providers, and Teachers on Mobile Phone Use for Sexual Reproductive Health Education
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (i)
- What are the experiences of adolescents of the use of mobile phones in Homabay County?
- (ii)
- What are the perceived disadvantages and constraints in mobile phone use by adolescents?
- (iii)
- How can the perceived constraints in adolescents’ use of mobile phones be addressed?
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design and Methods of Data Collection
2.2. Data Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Phone Use by Adolescents and Preferred Platforms
3.2. Benefits of Mobile Phone Use by Adolescents
3.2.1. Ease of Information Access to Reach Large Numbers
“We can form WhatsApp groups or post information on Facebook, and through these they access and get enlightened”—Head teacher (KII T02).
3.2.2. Enhances and Promotes Learning of Critical Information
3.2.3. Effective and Efficient
3.2.4. Helps to Bridge Intergenerational Gap
3.3. Challenges and Constraints
3.3.1. Cost
3.3.2. Limited Access
3.3.3. Impact on School Performance
3.3.4. Misuse
3.3.5. Relevance of Information, Privacy, and Stigma
3.3.6. Lack of Technical Knowhow
3.4. Addressing Challenges and Constraints
3.4.1. Inclusive Participation and Awareness to Improve Access and Use
3.4.2. Sensitization and Raising of Awareness among Parents on the SRH Mobile Phone Messaging
3.4.3. Creating Protected Times and Spaces Supported by Counselling
3.4.4. Relevance and Age-Appropriateness of Information
3.4.5. Develop a Special Platform and Innovative Channels/Platforms for ASRH Education
3.4.6. Training Adolescents on Usage and Supporting Them
“In schools we are trying because we have the health club, which talks to them about their health. We’ve even talked to them, we advise them at the assemblies, especially when they’re closing school, that when they’re going out, they’re out of school, where we cannot monitor them, that they should be careful of their lives because any decision they make will have consequences”.—Senior teacher (KIIT01).
“We can control the usage of these phones at home we should also do some close supervision on what they are accessing. Guide and counsel them, give them the positive side and the negative side of using because everything has both sides”.—Head teacher (KII T02).
“We should advise them not to use them to see what they should not see at their ages. To do what they should not do at that age”,ahead teacher explained (KII T07).
“You don’t just let them loose”,explained a deputy principal teacher (KII T10).
3.4.7. Addressing the Problem of Cost
4. Discussion
4.1. Phone Use by Adolescents: Acceptability, Accessibility, and Benefits
4.2. Challenges and Constraints to SRH Information through Mobile Phones
4.2.1. Misuse
4.2.2. Cost
4.2.3. Impact on School Performance
4.2.4. Limited Ownership of and Access to Mobile Phones
4.2.5. Limited Technical Capacity to Use Smart phones
4.2.6. Logistical Challenges
4.3. Addressing Constraints in Local Context to Inform Design of mHealth Intervention for SSA
4.3.1. Inclusive Participation of Stakeholders in Intervention Design and Co-Creation
4.3.2. Develop Adolescent Specific, Well Regulated ARH Information from Authoritative Sources
4.3.3. Downloadable Application for Discussion at Protected Safe Space and Time
4.3.4. Complementary Technical, Interactive Dialogue and Counselling Support to Phone Messages
4.3.5. Training of Adolescents and Key Stakeholders on Their Roles in Appropriate Phone Use
5. Conclusions
6. Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ASRH | Adolescent Sexual Reproductive Health |
LMIC | Low Middle Income Countries |
MHealth | Mobile Health |
NACOSTI | National Commission for Science, Technology and Innovation |
SRH | Sexual and Reproductive Health |
STI | Sexually Transmitted Infections |
UNESCO | United Nation Education Organization |
UNICEF | United Nations Children’s Fund |
Appendix A. Characteristics of FGD Participants
Sub County/School | Participant Type | FGD CODE # | Number of Participants | Gender | Age Range | Characteristics of Participants |
Asego | Boys | FGD B01 | 9 | Male | 9–13 | Adolescent in primary school |
Wagwe | Boys | FGD B02 | 10 | Male | 9–13 | Adolescent in primary school |
Kamenya | Boys | FGD B03 | 12 | Male | 9–13 | Adolescent in primary school |
Kanyango | Boys | FGD B04 | 12 | Male | 14–18 | Adolescent in high school |
Othoro | Boys | FGD B05 | 11 | Male | 14–18 | Adolescent in high school |
Asego | Girls | FGD G06 | 10 | Female | 9–13 | Adolescent in primary school |
Kamenya | Girls | FGD G07 | 10 | Female | 9–13 | Adolescent in primary school |
Kanyango | Girls | FGD G08 | 8 | Female | 14–18 | Adolescent in high school |
Othoro | Girls | FGD G09 | 11 | Female | 14–18 | Adolescent in high school |
Wagwe | Girls | FGD G10 | 12 | Female | 14–18 | Adolescent in high school |
Kisaku | Fathers | FGD F11 | 10 | Male | 30–55 | Fathers to the adolescents |
Kamenya | Fathers | FGD F12 | 8 | Male | 30–55 | Fathers to the adolescents |
Asego | Fathers | FGD F13 | 10 | Male | 30–55 | Fathers to the adolescents |
Kamenya | Fathers | FGD F14 | 11 | Male | 30–55 | Fathers to the adolescents |
Wagwe | Fathers | FGD F15 | 9 | Male | 30–55 | Fathers to the adolescents |
Kamenya | Mothers | FGD M16 | 12 | Female | 30–55 | Mothers to the adolescents |
Wariga | Mothers | FGD M17 | 11 | Female | 30–55 | Mothers to the adolescents |
Asego | Mothers | FGD M18 | 12 | Female | 30–55 | Mothers to the adolescents |
Kamenya | Mothers | FGD M19 | 8 | Female | 30–55 | Mothers to the adolescents |
Wagwe | Mothers | FGD M20 | 10 | Female | 30–55 | Mothers to the adolescents |
Ogongo | Community Health Volunteers | FGD C21 | 12 | Female | 30–55 | Health volunteers in communities working in Homabay County |
Kisaku | FGD C22 | 8 | Female | 30–55 | ||
Kamenya | FGD C23 | 10 | Male | 30–55 | ||
Kanyango | FGD C24 | 9 | Male | 30–55 | ||
Wagwe | FGD C25 | 12 | Female | 30–55 | ||
# Indicate transcript unique identification code. |
Appendix B. Summary of KII Participants
School/Hospital | Participant Type | KII CODE # | Gender | Age Range | Occupation/Designation |
Rangwe Primary | Senior teacher | KII T01 | Female | 30–55 | Teaching |
Gendia Primary | Head teacher | KII T02 | Female | 30–55 | Teaching |
Lianda Primary | Teacher | KII T03 | Female | 30–55 | Teaching |
Life central | Teacher | KII T04 | Female | 30–55 | Teaching |
Gendia Boys | Head teacher | KII T05 | Male | 30–55 | Teaching |
Migori boys | Deputy principal | KII T06 | Male | 30–55 | Teaching |
Ogande girls | Teacher | KII T07 | Female | 30–55 | Teaching |
Rangwe girls | Teacher | KII T08 | Female | 30–55 | Teaching |
Sindo Girls | Teacher | KII T09 | Female | 30–55 | Teaching |
Mbita boys | Deputy principal | KII T10 | Male | 30–55 | Teaching |
Rachuonyo | Nurse | KII H11 | Female | 30–55 | Service delivery |
Makongeni | Medical superintendent | KII H12 | Male | 30–55 | Service delivery |
Kabondo | Reproductive health officer | KII H13 | Male | 30–55 | Service delivery |
Magunga | Reproductive health officer | KII H14 | Male | 30–55 | Service delivery |
Ogongo | Clinical officer | KII H15 | Male | 30–55 | Service delivery |
Rangwe | Clinical officer | KII H16 | Male | 30–55 | Service delivery |
Waware | Clinical officer | KII H17 | Male | 30–55 | Service delivery |
Wagwe | Clinical officer | KII H18 | Male | 30–55 | Service delivery |
Pala | Registered nurse | KII H19 | Female | 30–55 | Service delivery |
# Indicate transcript unique identification code. |
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Themes | Main Findings | Boys | Girls | Mothers | Fathers | CHV | Providers | Teachers |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Use | Calls | + | + | + | + | + | + | + |
SMS | + | + | + | + | + | + | ||
Games | + | + | + | + | ||||
Reading | + | |||||||
Watching videos, movies | + | + | + | + | + | |||
Listening to radio, music | + | + | + | + | + | |||
Photos/video | + | + | + | + | + | |||
Info search, fashion, porn | + | + | + | + | + | |||
Getting news | + | |||||||
Platforms | + | +++ | + | + | + | + | ||
+ | ++ | + | + | + | + | |||
++ | +++ | + | + | + | + | + | ||
+ | + | + | + | |||||
+ | ++ | + | + | |||||
YouTube | ++ | + | + | + | ||||
Manager | + | |||||||
Betting sites | + | + | ||||||
Music platforms. | + | |||||||
Internet | + | |||||||
Snapchat | + | |||||||
Benefits | Fast information reach | + | + | + | + | + | + | ++ |
Learning SRH information | + | ++ | +++ | + | + | ++++ | ||
Effective, efficient | + | + | + | ++ | ||||
Privacy | +++ | ++ | ||||||
Clinic appointments | ++ | |||||||
Education platforms | + | + | + | +++ | ||||
Relevance | + | +++ | ||||||
Bridge generation age gap | + | |||||||
Exchange ideas | + | +++ | ||||||
Financial transactions | + | |||||||
Appealing | + | + | ||||||
Access | ++ | |||||||
Correct misconceptions | ++ |
Themes/Sub-Themes | Main Findings | Boys | Girls | Mothers | Fathers | CHV | Providers | Teachers |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cost | Buying phone, bundles, betting, demanding | ++++ | + | +++ | +++ | ++++ | ++ | ++ |
Leads to stealing | ++ | ++ | + | +++ | ||||
Impact on school performance | Through addiction | ++ | ++ | +++ | + | + | + | |
Misuse | Porn, misinformation may promote loose morals, early sex | +++ | +++ | ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | ++++ |
Betting, bad company | +++ | ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | ||||
Cheating exams | ++++ | |||||||
Poor logistics | Connectivity | + | + | ++ | ||||
Charging | + | + | ++ | + | + | |||
Analogue | + | + | + | |||||
No privacy, confidentiality | Sharing, e.g., with parents | + | + | |||||
Limited access | Accessing smart phone, not allowed in school, phone loss | + | + | + | + | + | ++ | ++ |
Parental control | Difficult, limited access | + | + | + | + | |||
Relevance of info | For age, language, style | + | ++ | + | + | |||
Stigma | Being judged negatively by peers, parents, society | + | ++ | + | ++ | |||
Knowhow | Info access, misinterpretation | + | + | + | + | + | ||
External influence | ++ | ++ | ++ |
To Include in mHealth Intervention Design | Boys | Girls | Mothers | Fathers | Providers | Teachers |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Inclusive participation and co-creation | ++ | ++ | ++ | + | +++ | + |
Regulated content with trustworthy, informed sources of age appropriate messages and guidelines | +++ | +++ | ++++ | ++ | ||
SRH application downloaded free, installed on phone, accessible platform at protected time and place | ++++ | +++ | ++ | + | ++++ | ++ |
Train all stakeholders on responsible phone use | +++ | +++ | + | + | +++ | +++ |
Interactive presentation complementing counselling, dialogue | + | + | + | ++ | ++ | |
Make affordable, provide support, phones, bundles | ++ | + | ++ | + | + | |
Sensitize, public, schools, churches | +++ | +++ | ||||
Enhanced connectivity, use alt. energy | + | + | ||||
Create a hotline, customer service | + | + | ||||
Include school curricula | + |
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Ochieng, B.M.; Smith, L.; Orton, B.; Hayter, M.; Kaseje, M.; Wafula, C.O.; Ocholla, P.; Onukwugha, F.; Kaseje, D.C.O. Perspectives of Adolescents, Parents, Service Providers, and Teachers on Mobile Phone Use for Sexual Reproductive Health Education. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 196. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050196
Ochieng BM, Smith L, Orton B, Hayter M, Kaseje M, Wafula CO, Ocholla P, Onukwugha F, Kaseje DCO. Perspectives of Adolescents, Parents, Service Providers, and Teachers on Mobile Phone Use for Sexual Reproductive Health Education. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(5):196. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050196
Chicago/Turabian StyleOchieng, Beverly M., Lesley Smith, Bev Orton, Mark Hayter, Margaret Kaseje, Charles O. Wafula, Penina Ocholla, Franklin Onukwugha, and Dan C. O. Kaseje. 2022. "Perspectives of Adolescents, Parents, Service Providers, and Teachers on Mobile Phone Use for Sexual Reproductive Health Education" Social Sciences 11, no. 5: 196. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050196
APA StyleOchieng, B. M., Smith, L., Orton, B., Hayter, M., Kaseje, M., Wafula, C. O., Ocholla, P., Onukwugha, F., & Kaseje, D. C. O. (2022). Perspectives of Adolescents, Parents, Service Providers, and Teachers on Mobile Phone Use for Sexual Reproductive Health Education. Social Sciences, 11(5), 196. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11050196