TY - JOUR T1 - Self-enrolment antenatal health promotion data as an adjunct to maternal clinical information systems in the Western Cape Province of South Africa JF - BMJ Global Health DO - 10.1136/bmjgh-2017-000565 VL - 3 IS - Suppl 2 SP - e000565 AU - Alexa Heekes AU - Nicki Tiffin AU - Pierre Dane AU - Themba Mutemaringa AU - Mariette Smith AU - Nesbert Zinyakatira AU - Peter Barron AU - Chris Seebregts AU - Andrew Boulle Y1 - 2018/04/01 UR - http://gh.bmj.com/content/3/Suppl_2/e000565.abstract N2 - Information systems designed to support health promotion in pregnancy, such as the MomConnect programme, are potential sources of clinical information which can be used to identify pregnancies prospectively and early on. In this paper we demonstrate the feasibility and value of linking records collected through the MomConnect programme, to an emergent province-wide health information exchange in the Western Cape Province of South Africa, which already enumerates pregnancies from a range of other clinical data sources. MomConnect registrations were linked to pregnant women known to the public health services using the limited identifiers collected by MomConnect. Three-quarters of MomConnect registrations could be linked to existing pregnant women, decreasing over time as recording of the national identifier decreased. The MomConnect records were usually the first evidence of pregnancy in pregnancies which were subsequently confirmed by other sources. Those at lower risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes were more likely to register. In some cases, MomConnect was the only evidence of pregnancy for a patient. In addition, the MomConnect records provided gestational age information and new and more recently updated contact numbers to the existing contact registry. The pilot integration of the data in the Western Cape Province of South Africa demonstrates how a client-facing system can augment clinical information systems, especially in contexts where electronic medical records are not widely available. ER -