Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-7cvxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T14:47:23.742Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Field assessment of a safe sleep instrument using smartphone technology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 December 2019

Rosemary Nabaweesi*
Affiliation:
Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USA Arkansas Children’s Research Institute, Little Rock, AR, USA
Leanne Whiteside-Mansell
Affiliation:
Family and Preventive Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USA
Samantha H. Mullins
Affiliation:
Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USA
Mallikarjuna R. Rettiganti
Affiliation:
Biostatistics, College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USA
Mary E. Aitken
Affiliation:
Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USA Arkansas Children’s Research Institute, Little Rock, AR, USA
*
Address for correspondence: R. Nabaweesi, DrPH, MBChB, Arkansas Children’s Research Institute, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Medicine, 1 Children’s Way, Slot 512-26, Little Rock, AR72202, USA. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Introduction:

Sudden unexpected infant death is the leading cause of infant mortality with black: white infant mortality remaining at 2:1 for the last decade. Smartphone technology provides a convenient and accessible tool for injury prevention anticipatory guidance among at-risk communities.

Materials and Methods:

A convenience sample of pregnant teen mothers who own a smartphone. During a 1-month postnatal home visit, a safe sleep environment survey was administered, infant sleep practices were observed, and mothers trained to take and submit standard infants’ sleep environment photographs. Photographs were independently assessed for inter-rater reliability (IRR) across five sleep safety domains (primary outcome): sleep location, surface, position, presence of soft items, and hazards near the sleep area. Expert and novice coders IRR was measured using Cohen’s kappa coefficient (K). Sleep safety correlation between photographs and observation, and parent report and observation was determined.

Results:

Sixteen (57.1%) mothers completed the home visit. Most parents reported infants sleeping supine (78.5) in parents’ bedroom (85.9%). Photographs demonstrated sleep position, soft items without the baby present, and hanging toys had perfect agreement across all three coder pairs. Safe sleep experts’ IRR demonstrated perfect agreement for sleep location, position, and soft items. While 83.8% of parents were observed putting their infants down to sleep on their back, 78.5% of parents reported doing the same and 82.4% of the photographs demonstrated supine infant sleep position.

Conclusion:

Using photographs, coders can reliably categorize some key infant sleep safety aspects, and photograph sleep safety is comparable to parent report and direct observation.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2019

Introduction

The National Center for Health Statistics and Center for Disease Control and Prevention report that, in the USA, nearly 4000 infants die annually from sleep-related causes [1, 2] including sudden unexpected infant death (SUID) and sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). SUID is the leading cause of infant mortality in the USA among children aged 1 month to 1 year [1, 3]. SUID is defined as the sudden and unexpected death of an infant without obvious cause before an investigation [3Reference Moon and Oden5]. After a full investigation, SUID may be classified as SIDS, suffocation, trauma, metabolic disease, or unknown. SIDS is defined as sudden, unexpected infant death that cannot be explained after completion of a scene investigation, autopsy, and clinical history review [Reference Moon, Oden and Grady6].

Sleep-related deaths have plateaued since the initial decline following the 1992 Back-to-Sleep campaign that was disseminated by the National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) [Reference Ottolini4Reference Moon, Oden and Grady6]. Subsequently, the AAP and NICHD developed evidence-based safe sleep recommendations [7] to educate parents, caregivers, and health care providers [7, Reference Stiffler8]. The recommendations’ key messages are four-fold: (1) keep infants on their back for all sleep, including nighttime and naps; (2) use a firm sleep surface such as a mattress in a safety-approved crib; (3) keep soft bedding and items such as bumper pads, blankets, and stuffed animals out of infants’ sleep area [2]; and (4) have the infant share the parents’ room but not the parents’ bed.

The difficulty in implementing these recommendations across all communities is illustrated by the disparities in infant death rates among races and between rural and urban areas [Reference Hauck, Tanabe and Moon9]. Black infants remain twice as likely to die from SUID as White infants [Reference Hauck, Tanabe and Moon9, 10]. Similarly, the number of rural infant sleep-related deaths is four times the number of urban infant sleep-related deaths [10]. White parents (84%) place infants on their back to sleep more often than Black parents (62%) [Reference Bombard11, Reference Flick12]. Additionally, Black parents are twice as likely to share an adult bed with their infants compared to White parents [Reference Bombard13, 14].

Studying, promoting, and delivering these sleep recommendations to reduce SUID require a targeted approach. One challenge is assessing an infant’s risk for SUID when resources are limited. Direct observation of the sleep environment is considered the gold standard for assessing infants at risk and for promoting compliance with injury-preventing recommendations [Reference Griffin and Griffin15, Reference Hanson16]. For example, home-visiting educators are trained to assess infant sleep environments and provide education to increase protective factors such as breastfeeding [Reference McKelvey17, Reference Hussain18]. However, due to families’ limited resources, many infant homes do not qualify for home-visiting programs, or parents are reluctant to participate because of the invasive nature of home visits [Reference McKelvey17, Reference McRae and Pham19]. An alternative to direct observation is parental reporting of safe sleep practices. The Newborn Sleep Safety Survey, developed and described by the study investigators [Reference Whiteside-Mansell20], is a validated instrument to assess infant risk and intervention success. To build upon this work, a cost-effective safe sleep assessment methodology using smartphone photography was developed.

Using photographs to assess an infant’s sleep environment could potentially identify key safety issues related to the infant’s sleep location, space, position, and items within and near the sleep space. The premise is that smartphone photography will be as effective as having a home visitor assess the sleep environment or parent report sleep practices using the Newborn Sleep Safety Survey [Reference Whiteside-Mansell20] (see Supplement).

This feasibility study aimed to develop and standardize a method for parents to take and transmit photographs of the infant’s sleep environment using a smartphone. A secondary aim was to test the usefulness of the photographs by evaluating the ability of safe sleep expert and novice coders to implement the coding protocol and thus determine the infant’s sleep risk. Investigators examined agreement between two safe sleep expert coders: an expert and a novice safe sleep coder, and an expert coder and expert home visitor. Also examined was the correlation between sleep safety assessments determined by photographs and direct observation, as well as by parental reports and direct observation.

Materials and Methods

Study Design and Setting

This study was conducted as part of an ongoing randomized clinical trial. Parent study aim was to determine the effectiveness of a prenatal safe sleep educational intervention on intergenerational safe sleep knowledge and skills for teen mothers (TMs). A convenience sample consisting of new or expectant TM was recruited from the Supplemental Nutritional Program for Women, Infants, and Children, obstetrics, and pediatric outpatient clinics. A 90-minute home visit was scheduled for approximately 1 month after birth, or as soon as possible, for new mothers. An experienced research assistant conducted the home visit, which included a parent interview, sleep environment observation, and photographic documentation training. Mothers also received supportive feedback on their safe sleep practices and their infant’s sleep environment, including referrals to hospitals and other community resources to obtain safe sleep equipment, such as portable play yards. Parents were asked to text photos 2–4 weeks after the home visit and received two $25 gift cards for the home visit and for sending photographs. Study data were collected and managed using Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) tools hosted at our institution [Reference Harris21]. REDCap is a secure, web-based application designed to support data capture for research studies, providing an intuitive interface for validated data entry, audit trails for tracking data manipulation and export procedures, automated export procedures for seamless data downloads to common statistical packages, and procedures for importing data from external sources. The institution’s review board expedited approval of all study activities.

Study Population, Screening, and Enrollment

Teenage mothers in the third trimester of pregnancy or up to 2 months post-delivery were recruited. Eligibility screening included the following inclusion criteria: mother (1) is between 13 and 19 years old and in the last trimester or up to 2 months post-delivery; (2) owns a smartphone that can take and send photographs; (3) will live within designated geographic area for at least 4 months after delivery to facilitate home visits; and (4) speaks English. Teenagers whose head of household declined permission to access the home were excluded from the study. Recruitment strategies included flyers, information sheets, word of mouth, social media, and key informants at safe sleep partner organizations.

Study Procedures, Measures, and Data Collection

Sleep environment parent report

The Newborn Sleep Safety Survey [Reference Whiteside-Mansell20] was designed by study investigators to assess the family’s living arrangements and the infant sleep environment. The survey assessed six key AAP recommendations including (1) supine sleep position, (2) firm sleep surface, (3) separate sleep location but in same room, (4) no soft items or loose bedding in sleep area, (5) not an overly warm sleep environment, and (6) pacifier use. The survey employed a Likert scale for questions referring to frequency of safe sleep practices. The options included “every time,” “more than half the time,” “about half the time,” “less than half the time,” “never,” and “don’t know.” Results demonstrated acceptable agreement between parental reports and observation, with one item showing strong agreement and four items showing moderate agreement [Reference Whiteside-Mansell20].

Sleep environment observation

An observation assessment that was developed to closely match the survey items was used. This assessment was designed to document the actual infant sleep environment and parents’ demonstrated sleep practices, including sleep location, surface, position, and other recommendations identical to the survey. A standard checklist was completed during the home visit.

Sleep environment photography protocol and parent training

The research assistant took sample photographs with their smartphone and demonstrated to TM. TM practiced taking the six photographs with their own smartphone. The research assistant verified that TM was taking photographs correctly. The research assistant asked TM to send the training photographs to study phone to verify compatibility. The photographs were downloaded from the study phone and uploaded into a REDCap database. Researchers developed, piloted, and standardized a photography protocol to document infants’ sleep environment using six photographs taken from three vantage points. The protocol included two photographs of the entire room taken from opposite ends of the infant’s sleep location; two photographs from the side of the crib, with and without a doll or the infant; and two photographs taken from above the sleep area with and without a doll or the infant. The photo coding protocol assessed the following: (1) type of sleep space (crib, bassinette, and adult bed), (2) room versus bed sharing (location), (3) sleep position, (4) presence of bumper pads, loose bedding, or soft items, and (5) hazards near the sleep area. Safe sleep experts coded the training photographs and follow up photographs using the photo coding protocol in the REDCap database.

Assessment

The primary outcome was sleep safety inter-rater reliability (IRR) of coders examining photographs. IRR measures the extent to which coders assign the same sleep safety measure using the same data source. Two types of safe sleep coders were used: (1) experts who were injury prevention specialists with more than 2 years’ experience conducting infant safe sleep education and research, and (2) novices who were injury prevention specialists with no experience conducting safe sleep research or education but who had experience in other unintentional injury prevention areas. To assign sleep safety scores across the five domains, novice coders used a coding guide that provided detailed descriptions of each domain selection.

Secondary outcomes were correlation between sleep safety assessments via researcher observation and photography methodology, assessment correlation between parental reports and observation, and parental behavior change following feedback on observed sleep practices during the home visit. The hypotheses were that the IRR among photography content coders would be strong, and that both the correlation between sleep safety using observation and photographs and sleep safety from the parental report and observation would be high. Reliability for each item was estimated using a Cohen’s kappa statistic and reported a one-sided 95% confidence interval. A kappa (K) agreement of 0.6 or higher was considered an indication of high correlation, based on McHugh’s K statistic interpretation [Reference McHugh22].

Results

Study Participant Characteristics

Forty-seven participants were screened for eligibility and 35 (74.5%) met eligibility criteria (Fig. 1). Eighty percent (n = 28) of eligible participants were enrolled. Sixteen mothers completed the home visit and 12 completed all study procedures. Sixty-four percent (n = 18) were Black and 21% (n = 6) were White, with a median age of 18 years (interquartile range, 2.26 years). Twelve mothers (42.8%) sent usable data. Four mothers (25%) did not send photographs because their phone service was disconnected.

Fig. 1. Participant eligibility, enrollment, and follow-up. aHealth educator observation and parent report (using survey) of the infant’s sleep environment conducted during the home visit.

Photograph Inter-Rater Reliability (IRR)

Based on the photographs, all of the coding pairs, regardless of safe sleep expertise, agreed on assessments of sleep position, soft items without the baby present, and hanging toys (Table 1). Conversely, there was no agreement between any coding pairs in identifying hazards such as electric cords near sleep area, K = 0.00. Some coders identified hazards while others did not. The IRR between safe sleep experts demonstrated perfect agreement for sleep location, sleep position, and soft items in sleep area without baby present (K = 1.00) and was strong for sleep surface (K = 0.70) (Table 1). The IRR between expert coders for items in the sleep area (with the baby present) varied at K = 0.00, K = 0.46, and K = 0.59 for soft items, no items, and loose bedding, respectively.

Table 1. Sleep safety inter-rater reliability using photographs

SSE, safe sleep experts.

a Used a coding guide.

The IRR between the novice and expert for identifying no hazards near the sleep area was higher (K = 0.52) than the IRR between safe sleep experts (K = 0.16). The IRR between expert and novice coders was lower for sleep location (K = 0.33) and sleep surface (K = 0.62). However, like the safe sleep expert coding pairs, sleep position, soft items in actual sleep area without baby, and hanging toys had perfect agreement (K = 1.00). The IRR agreement between coders with varying safe sleep knowledge for soft bedding without baby present was low (K = 0.20) but higher with baby present (K = 0.78). The IRR for no hazards observed near actual sleep area increased to K = 0.52. The IRR between home visitor and expert coder for all domains except for one (sleep surface) was identical to IRR between expert coders.

Sleep Safety Using Photographs and Parental Reports Compared to Home Visitor Observation

Sleep safety determined by parental reports and training photography were compared to home visitor observation, the ideal method for assessing sleep safety. Table 2 shows the percentage of safe sleep practices observed, mothers who reported safe sleep practices “most of the time,” and the safe sleep environment illustrated on the photographs. Also reported were the Kappa agreement of sleep safety determined by parental reports and observation, and agreement between sleep safety assessments determined by photographs and observation (see Table 3 for interpretation of Kappa scores).

Table 2. Comparison of safe sleep practices as obtained from parent report and photographs to the gold standard of observation

* Kappa agreement was statistically significant at the 0.05 significance level.

a Simulation with a doll.

b Percent behavior is observed/reported or identified on photograph for “Most of the Time” on Parent report.

c Cohen’s kappa inter-rater reliability coefficient.

Table 3. Interpretation of Kappa Scores [Reference Landis and Koch23]

Most parents (76.5%) were observed putting their infants down to sleep on their back, 76.5% reported doing so, and 82.4% of the photographs demonstrated a supine (back) infant sleep position. The agreement between parental reports and observed practices was strong (K = 0.85), as was agreement between the photographs and observation (K = 0.89). The research assistant observed that 94.1% of infants slept in the parents’ room. Similar to parent reporting, 82.4% of photographs showed that the infant slept in the parents’ room. Although sleep safety agreement between parental reports (82.4%) and observation (94.1%) for sleep location was excellent (K = 0.84), agreement between the photographs and observation was perfect (82.4%). Results suggest that smartphone photograph use in sleep safety assessment may be comparable to observation across infant sleep domains of location, position, and surface.

Comparing Infant Sleep Environments at Training and 1-Month Photographs

Lastly, sleep domains illustrated by training photographs were compared to domains illustrated by photographs sent 1 month after the home visit. Ten out of 12 (83%) mothers illustrated increased adherence to safe sleep recommendations across the five domains.

Discussion

Direct observation by safety-trained research staff is considered a more objective means of assessing uptake of a behavioral intervention than subject report alone to avoid response bias. To assess infant sleep safety practices using direct observation, home visits may be required, which may be difficult due to cost, shortage of personnel, and lack of time resources. In addition to being costly, the intrusive nature of home visits may limit subject participation. While direct observation introduces the Hawthorne effect, parental reports are susceptible to social desirability bias.

In response to this problem, the investigators developed a standardized and cost-effective method to assess infant sleep safety using photographs. The results of this study demonstrate that TMs could take usable photographs of their infants’ sleep environment and potentially send those photographs to a study cell phone via text message. The results also suggest that both safe sleep injury prevention experts and novices can assess sleep safety using photographs for domains of sleep position, sleep surface, and items in the sleep area without baby present. Reliably assessing subjective sleep domains, including items in the sleep area with baby present and hazards near the sleep area, was challenging for all coders. Additionally, novice coders were not able to reliably assess sleep location from the photographs.

Sleep safety correlation between training photographs and observation was high for location, position, surface, and hazard domains. This correlation was comparable to sleep safety correlation between parental reports and observation for sleep location, position, and hazards. The 1-month post-home-visit photographs illustrated that most parents adopted the safe sleep recommendations provided at the home visit.

Using photographs to demonstrate compliance with safe sleep and possibly other safety recommendations could provide a cost-effective assessment and evaluation tool with both cost and time-saving advantages over direct observation through home visits. The potential for direct feedback concerning safety issues demonstrated in the photos may support safe sleep interventions in clinical and community settings. Once the effectiveness and feasibility of smartphone photography is fully established, potential increases in safe sleep practices may be realized. The work presented here aligns with that of Herring et al. [Reference Herring24], who used a randomized controlled trial to demonstrate the acceptability, feasibility, and adaptability of a smartphone technology-based post-partum weight loss intervention. Their study comprised empirically supported behavior-changing strategies, daily skills, and self-monitoring text messages with personalized feedback, among 18- to 19-year-old mothers [Reference Herring24]. Likewise, using a survey, both Swindle et al. and Omaki et al. demonstrated that low-income parents of young children had daily usage rates of the internet, texting, and cell phone of greater than 60% [Reference Swindle25, Reference Omaki26]. Cell phone observation may provide an acceptable alternative to direct observation for other injury prevention mechanisms such as appropriate seatbelt placement, helmet or lifejacket fit, and smoke detector installation.

Approximately 42.8% of eligible mothers successfully sent usable photographs, suggesting feasibility of our approach. However, one weakness of this study was loss to follow-up. This was a feasibility study conducted as part of a clinical trial. The loss to follow-up in the feasibility study was mirrored in the parent study, a randomized clinical trial. We are in the process of developing a larger independent study proposal using lessons learned from the feasibility study. Reducing the time lag between initial screening, recruitment, scheduled home visit, and prompt for photographs may curb this loss, but a challenge that needs to be addressed in a larger follow-up study is maintaining connection to participants despite phone service interruptions. The second weakness was that the focus on TMs may limit generalizability to the wider parent population and parents with less access to smartphones. Further study with a larger and more broadly representative sample of parents is warranted. Finally, the lack of reliable risk assessments may be addressed with adjustments to the photography protocol such as using video or changing vantage points from which photographs are taken.

Conclusion

Smartphone photography is a promising assessment tool for health information. Safe sleep injury prevention experts and novices may reliably categorize some key safety aspects of infant sleep practices using smartphone photographs, and the safety assessment from photographs correlates well with direct observations of the sleep environment. However, further study is needed to fully characterize sleep environments using photographs alone.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the Children’s University Medical Group and the Arkansas Biosciences Institute, the major research component of the Arkansas Tobacco Settlement Proceeds Act of 2000 and Generations in Families Talking Safe Sleep project was supported by 1R01HD076702-01A1, Department of Health and Human Services NIH, Eunice Kennedy Shriver NICHD.

Disclosures

The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Supplementary material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/cts.2019.446

References

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Health Statistics Infant Mortality Rate. [Internet], 2018. Retrieved from www.cdc.gov/nchs/pressroom/sosmap/infant_mortality_rates/infant_mortality.htm Accessed April 11, 2017.Google Scholar
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Sudden Unexpected Infant Death and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. Division of Reproductive Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. [Internet], 2017. Retrieved from www.cdc.gov/sids/data.htm Accessed April 6, 2017.Google Scholar
CDC. Infant Mortality. National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Division of Reproductive Health [Internet] 2017. Retrieved from www.cdc.gov/features/infantmortality/index.html Accessed April 1, 2015.Google Scholar
Ottolini, MC, et al. Prone infant sleeping despite the “Back to Sleep” campaign. Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine 1999; 153(5): 512517.Google ScholarPubMed
Moon, RY, Oden, RP. Back to sleep: can we influence child care providers? Pediatrics 2003; 112(4): 878882.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moon, RY, Oden, RP, Grady, KC. Back to sleep: an educational intervention with women, infants, and children program clients. Pediatrics 2004; 113(3 Pt 1): 542547.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Safe to Sleep Public Education Campaign. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [Internet] 2014. Retrieved from https://safetosleep.nichd.nih.gov/ Accessed August 26, 2014.Google Scholar
Stiffler, D, et al. Sudden infant death and sleep practices in the Black community. Journal for Specialists in Pediatric Nursing 2018; 23(2): e12213.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hauck, FR, Tanabe, KO, Moon, RY. Racial and ethnic disparities in infant mortality. Seminars in Perinatology 2011; 35(4): 209220.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
National Center for Health Statistics. Natality Restricted Access File with Geographic Detail. Maternal Child Health Bureau. 2009 Accessed July 2, 2017.Google Scholar
Bombard, JM, et al. Vital signs: trends and disparities in infant safe sleep practices – United States, 2009–2015. MMWR. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 2018; 67(1): 3946.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Flick, L, et al. Sleep position and the use of soft bedding during bed sharing among African American infants at increased risk for sudden infant death syndrome. The Journal of Pediatrics 2001; 138(3): 338343.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bombard, J, et al. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report: Vital Signs: Trends and Disparities in Infant Safe Sleep Practices – United States, 2009–2015. Accessed September 1, 2018].CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System Division of Reproductive Health National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion: Selected 2012–2015 Maternal and Child Health Indicators, June 4, 2018. Accessed January 9, 2018.Google Scholar
Griffin, SO, Griffin, PM. Home visits and telephone contacts for preventing early childhood caries could be cost effective. Journal of Evidence Based Dental Practice 2016; 16(2): 133135.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hanson, DW, et al. Closing the gap between injury prevention research and community safety promotion practice: revisiting the public health model. Public Health Reports 2012; 127(2): 147155.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McKelvey, LM, et al. Effects of home visiting on adolescent mothers’ parenting attitudes. American Journal of Public Health 2012; 102(10): 18601862.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hussain, S, et al. You can have your breastmilk and safe sleep too: a preliminary analysis of infant safe sleep data in a Midwestern home visiting program. Injury Epidemiology 2018; 5(Suppl 1): 14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McRae, I, Pham, M. When is a GP home-visit program financially viable? Australian Journal of Primary Health 2016. Feb;22(6): 554558.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Whiteside-Mansell, L, et al. Assessment of safe sleep: validation of the parent newborn sleep safety survey. Journal of Pediatric Nursing 2017; 35: 3035.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harris, PA, et al. Research electronic data capture (REDCap)--a metadata-driven methodology and workflow process for providing translational research informatics support. Journal of Biomedical Informatics 2009; 42(2): 377381.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McHugh, ML. Interrater reliability: the kappa statistic. Biochemia Medica (Zagreb) 2012; 22(3): 276282.Google ScholarPubMed
Landis, JR, Koch, GG. The measurement of observer agreement for categorical data. Biometrics 1977; 33: 159174.Google ScholarPubMed
Herring, SJ, et al. Using technology to promote postpartum weight loss in urban, low-income mothers: a pilot randomized controlled trial. Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior 2014; 46(6): 610615.Google ScholarPubMed
Swindle, TM, et al. Technology use and interest among low-income parents of young children: differences by age group and ethnicity. Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior 2014; 46(6): 484490.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Omaki, E, et al. Evaluating a smartphone application to improve child passenger safety and fire safety knowledge and behaviour. Injury Prevention 2017; 23(1): 58.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Participant eligibility, enrollment, and follow-up. aHealth educator observation and parent report (using survey) of the infant’s sleep environment conducted during the home visit.

Figure 1

Table 1. Sleep safety inter-rater reliability using photographs

Figure 2

Table 2. Comparison of safe sleep practices as obtained from parent report and photographs to the gold standard of observation

Figure 3

Table 3. Interpretation of Kappa Scores [23]

Supplementary material: File

Nabaweesi et al. supplementary material

Nabaweesi et al. supplementary material

Download Nabaweesi et al. supplementary material(File)
File 15 KB