Omaya

For mothers

Simple postpartum check-ins after you go home.

Omaya supports mothers in Ghana with phone and SMS check-ins after birth, helping surface recovery changes that may need a hospital team's attention.

Overview

No app. No complicated portal. Just follow-up.

Omaya is made for the period after discharge, when questions about recovery, feeding, mood, medication, and warning signs can come up at home.

Works on any phone that can receive calls or SMS.

Asks simple questions about how recovery is changing.

Creates a clearer pathway back to care when help may be needed.

How it feels

A check-in that follows your recovery.

Omaya prompts can help mothers notice changes and share updates without needing to travel for every question.

  • Receive scheduled check-ins after discharge.
  • Share changes in pain, bleeding, mood, sleep, feeding, or medication.
  • Get routed back to the care team when answers need attention.

What to know

Omaya works alongside your hospital team.

The service is not a replacement for urgent care or professional medical advice. It helps create a follow-up pathway with qualified care teams.

  • Emergency symptoms should be handled through urgent care channels.
  • Clinical decisions remain with trained health professionals.
  • Early access is currently focused on Ghana pilots.

FAQ

Questions about postpartum support for mothers.

Can mothers use Omaya without a smartphone?

Yes. Omaya is designed around regular phone calls and SMS, so a smartphone or app download is not required.

What kinds of questions can Omaya ask?

Check-ins can ask about recovery changes such as pain, bleeding, mood, sleep, feeding, medication, and warning signs.

Is Omaya available to every mother in Ghana now?

Omaya is currently focused on pilots and early access conversations in Ghana.

Start a conversation

Bring postpartum follow-up into your Ghana pilot.

Contact Omaya to request a hospital pilot, ask about early access, or discuss maternal health partnerships.