Knowledge Bank

RESEARCH & HISTORY

The SMS4dads team joins with researchers and clinicians across Australia and internationally to build the knowledge base for expanding and deepening the support that we can offer to new fathers, their partners and babies
Play Video

SMS4DADS GLOBAL REACH

SMS4dads has extended its reach globally. Find out how SMS4dads translates to dads world-wide.

Below are projects showcasing the work of SMS4dads in Kenya, Ethiopia, Belgium, Colombia and Kenya. Get in touch to find out more about international developments and opportunities to support new fathers via digital methods.

CURRENT RESEARCH PROJECTS

SMS4dads continues to carry out research fine-tuning and tailor-making the message service for various groups. Below is a showcase of some current research projects.

Fathers & Miscarriage

Helping fathers who have experienced a miscarriage in a previous pregnancy cope with the understandable anxiety that may arise as the birth approaches

Miscarriage is common but rarely talked about, particularly among fathers. But fathers as well as mothers can become anxious in the lead up to the next birth. In this study, the preparation of text messages for those enrolled in SMS4dads who have previous experience of pregnancy loss will be guided by the advice from parents who have ‘been there’.

With our partners Red Nose, Australia’s leading Bereavement Support Service, the perspectives of mothers and fathers who have suffered the loss of a pregnancy will be built into the SMS4dads messages.

What support looks like

Articulating the support role of fathers for new mothers who are well and those who are struggling

Support is something that fathers are encouraged to offer to their partners but rarely are they offered guidance or strategies to enable them to succeed or judge their progress.

In a co-design process, fathers partnering mothers during pregnancy and birth are engaged with researchers to unpack the black box of ‘support’ and provide useful materials for new fathers.

WHAT FIRST NATIONS DADS SAY

What do young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men want to know as they become fathers?

Working with senior First Nations men from Arnhem Land (NT), Broome (WA), Moree (NSW) and Gold Coast (QLD), the views of fathers-to-be and new fathers will be gathered from yarning circles in each region.

Messages based on their views will be developed in a co-design process to provide Australia’s first tailor made text program for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander fathers (SMS4FirstNationsDads).

lived experience of losing a baby

How can the ‘lived experience’ of losing a baby be incorporated into text messages for grieving fathers?

Using a co-design approach, over 500 mothers and fathers will contribute to the development of brief text messages that can be delivered to the mobile phones of grieving fathers. In a previous study funded by Red Nose, Australia’s leading Bereavement Support Service, messages were developed to raise fathers’ awareness of the risk factors for stillbirth.

Text messages were designed with expert guidance to engage fathers in support of mothers’ side sleeping and taking action if the baby’s movements slowed. In this study, funded by the Australian Department of Health, Red Nose is partnering with SMS4dads to develop messages and resources for fathers who are faced with the loss of their baby.

My partner is not coping

What can a father do when he notices that his partner is not coping with new motherhood?

Anxiety and depression are common in mothers before and after the birth.

Fathers will be the ones most likely to see how the mother is managing and be in a good position to offer help. Fathers participating in SMS4dads will receive text messages offering guides to deciding how worried he should be and ideas of how to help, including seeking professional help when needed.

In partnership with PANDA, Perinatal Anxiety and Depression Australia, a national helpline supporting the mental health of parents and families, SMS4dads is developing text-based support for up to one in five fathers in this difficult position.

Connecting with rural dads versus urban dads

Do rural fathers engage with text message support more or less than urban fathers?

Although internet services vary widely in regional Australia text messages can be received in most locations. SMS4dads provides information and support service that potentially can reach across the vast distances separating rural and remote fathers from health and parenting services.

The results from 3,200 fathers enrolled in the NSW Health Focus on New Fathers pilot will provide a window into the differences between the engagement of urban and rural fathers.

Measuring engagement

Measuring ‘engagement’ in text-based parenting programs

In a light-touch programme such as SMS for dads gauging engagement is done through the father's responsiveness to all aspects of the programme. In this analysis the threads of engagement are described and measured in a sample of over 3000 fathers who participated in the NSW Health Focus on New Fathers pilot over 2020-2021.

This study will provide a template for other parenting programmes using text to support mothers and fathers.

Premi Babies

Babies who arrive early – supporting fathers in NICU

Mothers and fathers with experience of a baby in NICU are working with SMS4dads Team members and expert clinicians to prepare text messages tailored to fathers’ needs when the arrival of his baby does not go to plan.

Research behind SMS4dads

Along with the current research projects being conducted, a number of studies have informed the development of SMS4dads. Below you’ll find abstracts from some key papers.
SMS4dads man on phone
Abstracts Include
  1. Supporting men through their transition to fatherhood with messages delivered to their smartphones: a feasibility study of SMS4dads.
  2. The development and application of a protocol for the writing, assessing, and validating of a corpus of relationship-focused text messages for new and expecting fathers.
  3. Stayin’ on Track: the feasibility of developing Internet and mobile phone-based resources to support young Aboriginal fathers.
  4. Supporting partners of mothers with severe mental illness through text–a feasibility study.
  5. Process evaluation of text-based support for fathers during the transition to fatherhood (SMS4dads): mechanisms of impact. 
  6. What is SMS4dadsSA?  Final Report, 30 June 2019, Associate Professor Richard Fletcher Chief Investigator

Abstract 1

Fletcher R, Kay-Lambkin F, May C, Oldmeadow J, Attia J, Leigh L. (2017) Supporting men through their transition to fatherhood with messages delivered to their smartphones: a feasibility study of SMS4dads BMC Public Health DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4978-0

Abstract 2

May, C. D., & Fletcher, R. (2019). The development and application of a protocol for the writing, assessing, and validating of a corpus of relationship-focused text messages for new and expecting fathers. Health informatics journal, 25(2), 240-246.. DOI: 10.1177/1460458217704249

Abstract 3

Fletcher, R., Hammond, C., Faulkner, D., Turner, N., Shipley, L., Read, D., & Gwynn, J. (2017). Stayin’on Track: the feasibility of developing Internet and mobile phone-based resources to support young Aboriginal fathers. Australian journal of primary health, 23(4), 329-334.

Abstract 4

Fletcher, R., StGeorge, J., Rawlinson, C., Baldwin, A., Lanning, P., & Hoehn, E. (2020). Supporting partners of mothers with severe mental illness through text–a feasibility study. Australasian Psychiatry, 1039856220917073.

Abstract 5

Fletcher, R., Knight, T., Macdonald, J. A., & StGeorge, J. (2019). Process evaluation of text-based support for fathers during the transition to fatherhood (SMS4dads): mechanisms of impact. BMC Psychology, 7(1), 1-11.

Abstract 6

Final Report, 30 June 2019, Associate Professor Richard Fletcher Chief Investigator

ABSTRACT

Fletcher R, Kay-Lambkin F, May C, Oldmeadow J, Attia J, Leigh L. (2017) Supporting men through their transition to fatherhood with messages delivered to their smartphones: a feasibility study of SMS4dads BMC Public Health DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4978-0

Objective

The project aimed to test of the quality and acceptability of researcher-developed Short Message Service (SMS) messages designed to support fathers of infants aged 12 months or less.

Background

The findings of previous studies suggest antenatal and postnatal depression among fathers’ impacts negatively on the health of family members.

Method

Draft messages were first modified based on expert review. In a second phase, parents (mothers n = 56; fathers n = 46; unknown n = 4) were recruited through two early childhood parenting services to rate the clarity, usefulness and relevance of the 70 SMS messages using a paper-based survey. In a third phase, 15 fathers were recruited to receive texts at different times over three weeks.

Results

Findings suggest that SMS items were easily understood by the majority of parents, with only 3% of responses indicating an item was ‘not easily understood’. Feedback from parents indicated that negatively rated SMS messages were considered as either poorly phrased, lacking enough information or as not offering sufficient support. The majority (88%) of the SMS items were also rated as ‘useful’ by the parents.

Conclusion

Fathers’ responses indicated that

Fathers’ responses indicated that

The study has produced a set of brief text messages suitable and acceptable to new fathers and their partners.

ABSTRACT

May, C. D., & Fletcher, R. (2019). The development and application of a protocol for the writing, assessing, and validating of a corpus of relationship-focused text messages for new and expecting fathers. Health informatics journal, 25(2), 240-246.. DOI: 10.1177/1460458217704249

In developed countries, antenatal education aims to reduce difficulties that mothers and fathers experience during transition to parenthood.

However, fathers are often distracted from preparing themselves by the attention given to preparing and supporting mothers.

Developments in digital communication present alternative means of supporting fathers at this time.

In developed countries, antenatal education aims to reduce difficulties that mothers and fathers experience during transition to parenthood.

However, fathers are often distracted from preparing themselves by the attention given to preparing and supporting mothers.

The process employed in message development was similar to that previously employed in developing messages for people who had experienced a cardiac event.

A corpus of messages and linked information focusing on fathers’ relationships with their children, partners, and themselves were initially developed by a core group.

The corpus was then culled, refined, and expanded by a larger, more diverse, group of experts (n=46), including parents, academics, and practitioners.

The iterative, consultative process used in this study proved to be a functional way of developing and refining a large corpus of timed messages, and linked information, which could be sent to new fathers during their transition to fatherhood.

ABSTRACT

Fletcher, R., Hammond, C., Faulkner, D., Turner, N., Shipley, L., Read, D., & Gwynn, J. (2017). Stayin’on Track: the feasibility of developing Internet and mobile phone-based resources to support young Aboriginal fathers. Australian journal of primary health, 23(4), 329-334.

Young Aboriginal fathers face social and emotional challenges in the transition to fatherhood, yet culturally appropriate support mechanisms are lacking.

Peer mentoring to develop online and mobile phone-based resources and support may be a viable approach to successfully engage these young men.

This feasibility study engaged two trusted Aboriginal mentors and researchers to partner with one regional and two rural Aboriginal communities in New South Wales, Australia.

Early in the research process, 20 young Aboriginal fathers were recruited as co-investigators. These fathers were integral in the development of web-based resources and testing of mobile phone-based text messaging and mood-tracking programs tailored to provide fathering and mental health support.

Overwhelmingly positive feedback from evaluations reinforced community pride in and ownership of the outcomes.

The young men’s involvement was instrumental in not only developing culturally appropriate support, but also in building their capacity as role models for other fathers in the community. The positive results from this feasibility study support the adoption of participatory approaches to the development of resources for Aboriginal communities

ABSTRACT

Fletcher, R., StGeorge, J., Rawlinson, C., Baldwin, A., Lanning, P., & Hoehn, E. (2020). Supporting partners of mothers with severe mental illness through text–a feasibility study. Australasian Psychiatry, 1039856220917073.

Objective

During the perinatal period, partners of mothers with severe mental illness (SMI) play an important role in managing the new baby and supporting the mothers’ wellbeing. Providing information via mobile phone on infant care, partner support and self-care may assist partners in their support role.

Method

Partners (n = 23) of mothers with SMI were enrolled in a partner- focused SMS service sending brief texts 14 times per month for a maximum of 10 months.

Partners (n = 16) were interviewed on exit and their responses analysed for acceptability and perceived usefulness of the texts.

Results

Partners remained with the programme and expressed high acceptability of the texts. Participants identified effects such as

increased knowledge of and interaction with their baby; effective support for their partner; and reassurance that ‘things were normal’.

Few partners sought support for their own mental health.

Conclusions

Texts supplied to mobile phones of partners of new mothers with SMI may increase partners’ support. The texts in this study were acceptable to partners and were reported to

enhance a partner’s focus on the mother’s needs, raise the partner’s awareness of the infant’s needs, and support the partner’s confidence and competence in infant care.

ABSTRACT

Fletcher, R., Knight, T., Macdonald, J. A., & StGeorge, J. (2019). Process evaluation of text-based support for fathers during the transition to fatherhood (SMS4dads): mechanisms of impact. BMC Psychology, 7(1), 1-11.

Background

There is growing evidence for the value of technology-based programs to support fathers to make positive transitions across the perinatal period. However, past research has focused on program outcomes with little attention to the mechanisms of impact.

Knowledge of why a program works increases potential for replication across contexts.

Methods
Participants were 40 Australian fathers enrolled in the SMS4dads text-based perinatal support program (Mean age 35.11 (5.87). From a starting point between 16 weeks gestation and 12 weeks postpartum, they were sent a maximum of 184 text messages. An inductive approach was used to analyse post-program semi- structured interviews. The aim was to identify mechanisms of impact aligned to previously identified program outcomes, which were that SMS4dads:

  1. Is helpful/useful;
  2. Lessens a sense of isolation;
  3. Promotes the father-infant relationship; and
  4. Supports the father-partner relationship.

Results

We identified two types of mechanisms: four were structural within the program messages and five were psychological within the participant.

The structural mechanisms included: syncing information to needs; normalisation; prompts to interact; and, the provision of a safety net.

The psychological mechanisms were: increase in knowledge; feelings of confidence; ability to cope; role orientation; and, the feeling of being connected.

These mechanisms interacted with each other to produce the pre-identified program outcomes.

 

Conclusions

If the current findings are generalisable then, future mobile health program design and evaluation would benefit from explicit consideration to how both program components and individual cognitive and behavioural processes combine to elicit targeted outcomes.

KEYWORDS Process evaluation, Fathers, Mechanisms, Text-based, Qualitative

ABSTRACT

SMS4dadsSA, Final Report
30 June 2019, Associate Professor Richard Fletcher
Chief Investigator

What is SMS4dadsSA?

SMS4dadsSA was founded on previous research and capacity building by the Fathers and Families Team at the University of Newcastle in the development of SMS4dads. The SA Mental Health Commission contracted the University of Newcastle to run a pilot initiative based on the Fathers and Families Team’s previous work. This was in response to the over 2200 South Australians consulted during the development of the SA Mental Health Strategic Plan 2017 – 2022 where one of the dominant themes was around supporting new parents’ mental health.

 

SMS4dadsSA started in February 2018 and finished in June 2019. It was overseen by a group of partners who met regularly and served as a project steering committee.

 

 

This committee was headed by the SA Mental Health Commission and included Newcastle University, Child and Family Health Service, Country SA and Adelaide PHNs, Flinders Foundation, Women’s and Children’s Local Health Network and community representatives selected through an EOI process.
SMS4DadsSA ran similarly to other SMS4Dads programs conducted previously by the Fathers and Families Team at University of Newcastle by sending text messages to expectant and new fathers enrolled in the program from 20 weeks gestation to 24 weeks after the baby’s birth. Messages provided information, encouragement and support as they focused on a father’s relationship with his baby, his partner and himself. Many of the messages contained links to further information while also being timed around the baby’s expected date of birth. The aim was to provide timely and relevant information that would reflect things that were likely to be happening when the text arrived. 

Fathers also received Mood Checker messages which asked them to reflect on how they were coping with specific issues that they were likely to be experiencing at that time in their transition to parenthood. Mood Checker messages were linked to an application that would escalate fathers who reported that they were not coping to specialised phone support. Fathers were able to complete all their interactions with SMS4dadsSA, including enrolment, with their smartphone. At any time the fathers could exit the program by sending a “Stop” message. 
 
 
 What did we do?

The development of SMS4dadsSA included the following features:

  • Messages (up to 171), many including linked information, were sent to 244 new dads.
  • Regular surveys exploring participant experience of last message sent
  • Pre, post and mid-program surveys  and interview schedules
  • A database to manage message delivery and track participation
  • A website to manage enrolment
  • A research protocol and ethics application

The project also included the following activities:

  • Monitoring survey responses and interview scheduling.
  • Monitoring and management of opt out requests.
  • Collation, analysis and reporting of quantitative and qualitative data.
  • Monitoring of linked information to ensure links were working

 How did we go?

Enrolment in SMS4dadsSA met with expectations and fathers generally reported high levels of satisfaction with their experience of receiving the messages. Few fathers opted out of the project, with more than 80% receiving messages until completion. Over three quarters also sent feedback on individual messages and more than 50% responded to surveys during the project (See tables A -C). 

Fathers reported that the messages influenced their knowledge, their ideas about a fathers’ role, their behaviours in relationships with their new baby and their partner and prompted self-care. Response rates to surveys indicated that fathers were actively participating in the program while qualitative evidence demonstrated high levels of engagement for those who were able to participate in interviews.

 

During the course of the project 6 fathers (2.5% of participants) were escalated through the Mood Tracker application to engagement with phone support. It is therefore apparent that fathers, who may not have done well without the intervention, were connected to appropriate services through their involvement with SMS4dads.

The pilot project SMS4dadsSA has established that this scalable, cost effective intervention is acceptable to new fathers and that mothers understand and appreciate the benefits of the intervention. The SMS4dadsSA text-based intervention can be an effective way to support new dads and connect those that are not coping to appropriate support. Capacity in the present system could support the ongoing delivery of SMS4dadsSA to all new fathers in metropolitan, rural and remote locations across South Australia

 

DOWNLOAD FULL REPORT

 

 

Richard’s research revealed possible long-term negative impacts on the children of dads with mental health issues. Fathers’ depressive symptoms in the first year after the birth predicted behaviour problems in their children years later.

“If dads’ mental health has such a dramatic impact then we need to be screening dads for depression, not just mums,” Richard explains.

In response to these limitations, Richard and his team have designed a smart-phone based program that allows mobile connection for new and expectant dads.

Participants receive texts containing information and links, and self-report their mood. If the mood tracker identifies dads as needing extra support, they will be offered a phone call from a counsellor trained in this area.

Following the success of the pilot of the SMS4dads program, Funding was received to enable a National roll-out.

“When dad’s miss antenatal classes or activities, they also miss out on contact and links to other people.  They may never get the chance to say to anyone, look I’m really stressed,” he points out.

“SMS4dads is a way of bringing dads into the health system and keeping them linked in with services and support,” explains Richard.

Richard Fletcher

Associate Professor, PhD

Richard credits a varied career, a talented and innovative team, and much life experience for affording him the insight needed to address the challenges related to actively engaging dads.

After completing his masters in Medical Science, studying epidemiology, Richard earned his PhD focusing on fathers and attachment.

“Fathers are invisible in many places, and that is endemic. Not because people dislike fathers, but because the system is set up to be focused on mothers.”

Some services and organisations are aware of the need to engage dads, but have been unsuccessful in their attempts.

“When people are challenged about this, they generally want dads involved,” Richard affirms.

“Often, however, they just don’t know how to do it.”

Richard works with health professionals on issues related to fathers, and has delivered many antenatal programs for expectant dads.

He credits his own family with giving him an understanding of the role of fathers needed to make his work relevant.

“I have three daughters and two stepdaughters,”

“My kids would say they taught me just about everything I know and they’d be right. They’ve taught me a lot, and still do.”

Richard’s research revealed possible long-term negative impacts on the children of dads with mental health issues. Fathers’ depressive symptoms in the first year after the birth predicted behaviour problems in their children years later.

“If dads’ mental health has such a dramatic impact then we need to be screening dads for depression, not just mums,” Richard explains.

In response to these limitations, Richard and his team have designed a smart-phone based program that allows mobile connection for new and expectant dads.

Participants receive texts containing information and links, and self-report their mood. If the mood tracker identifies dads as needing extra support, they will be offered a phone call from a counsellor trained in this area.

Following the success of the pilot of the SMS4dads program, Funding was received to enable a National roll-out.

“When dad’s miss antenatal classes or activities, they also miss out on contact and links to other people.  They may never get the chance to say to anyone, look I’m really stressed,” he points out.

“SMS4dads is a way of bringing dads into the health system and keeping them linked in with services and support,” explains Richard.