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Evaluate the Role of a Personalized Smartphone Based Application to Improve Childhood Immunization Coverage

A

Aga Khan University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Mobile Application
Routine Childhood Immunization

Treatments

Behavioral: Android based mobile phone application

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04449107
2019-1534-5556

Details and patient eligibility

About

The vision of the investigators is to build capacity in technology-driven healthcare innovation in LMCIs. The programme will be initiated by a feasibility and proof-of-concept (POC) study to tackle the lack of awareness around immunization, which is a major health issue in developing countries. Mobile apps and social media have been shown to be effective in various programmes worldwide, but there is limited data from LMICs on the use of digital technologies in improving routine immunization (RI) coverage.

Full description

Pakistan is one of the countries with the highest rates of child death in the world. It ranks 4th in child mortality, with 60% deaths due to vaccine-preventable diseases (VPDs). The immunization coverage in Pakistan is estimated to be 59%, which is still well below the desired level, leading to continued polio transmission, large measles outbreaks, and thousands of deaths from vaccine-preventable illnesses. In addition, Pakistan is a major polio epidemic country and among 3 countries in the world requiring proof of polio vaccination for international travel. Pakistan demographic and health survey in 2017-2018 suggests 88% percent of children had received BCG vaccine due at birth, 86% and 95% had received the first dose of pentavalent and polio vaccine respectively due at the 6th week. Furthermore, 75% and 86% of children had received the third dose of the pentavalent and polio vaccines, respectively, due at 14th week and measles vaccination was 73%, which is due at 9 months. However, these rates are at 1 year of age and much higher than vaccination coverage rate at scheduled time and among conflict hits and displaced populations. Improved RI coverage is recommended as the priority public health strategy to reduce VPDs and eradicate polio in Pakistan and worldwide.

According to immunization coverage surveys, 1 in 5 children are unimmunized. A major reason for poor childhood vaccine coverage is low immunization uptake, when parents are unable to complete the entire series of vaccines in accordance with the scheduled timelines. Some of the reasons include: (1) the family is not in favor of getting their child immunized, (2) low trust in vaccines provided through Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) and government health care providers, and (3) caregivers have forgotten their child's next vaccination due date or child's EPI card is misplaced. These barriers may be modified with additional support through education and behavior change strategies. In addition, with more pressing issues of food and shelter, preventive health often takes the back seat, and parents and caregivers forget or ignore the subsequent doses of vaccines for their children. There is an immense need to encourage parents' care seeking and collaboration with the health care providers to improve initial vaccine uptake and the completion of all doses according to the schedule. New innovative and cost-effective techniques are necessary for practical solutions to improve vaccination uptake and coverage.

Mobile phones offer a new medium to provide education and advocate families or caregivers to enable behavior change so as to improve immunization uptake. Mobile phone use has also increased in countries with low RI coverage and a high risk of VPDs. Good examples are Nigeria and Pakistan, where there were around 170 and 140 million mobile phone subscribers, respectively, in 2014. There are limited data from LMICs set up on the role of SMS-based interventions for improvement of RI coverage, and conventional 1-way reminder SMS text messages were used by most of the studies as the intervention. Overall, very few studies compared reminders, educational, and interactive SMS messages related to childhood vaccination uptake. Although some of the studies have shown some behavior change for improvement in vaccination coverage, more rigorous application of health behavior change model needs to be applied to understand the impact of reminder, educational, and interactive messages on behavior change related to improvement in RI coverage. However, data from developing countries regarding the role of automated calls in improving vaccine coverage are limited.

The vision of the investigators is to build capacity in technology-driven healthcare innovation in LMCIs. The programme will be initiated by a feasibility and proof-of-concept (POC) study to tackle the lack of awareness around immunization, which is a major health issue in developing countries. Mobile apps and social media have been shown to be effective in various programmes worldwide, but there is limited data from LMICs on the use of digital technologies in improving routine immunization (RI) coverage.

Enrollment

328 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 weeks to 2 months old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • parent or guardian or at least one person in the household has a working android based smart mobile phone
  • ability to use android based smart phone
  • Parent or guardian providing consent.

Exclusion criteria

  • If the family will not be visiting AKU for 10- and 14-week RI.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

328 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Arm
Experimental group
Description:
The intervention arm in addition to the standard counselling will include receiving text messages, voice messages, pictorial messages and video messages regarding vaccination once a week till the child turns 14 weeks
Treatment:
Behavioral: Android based mobile phone application
Control Arm
No Intervention group
Description:
The control group will receive one-time standard verbal counselling at the time of initial visit for on-time EPI vaccines at 10 and 14 weeks of age as recommended by EPI, government of Pakistan.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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