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Clinical Trial Summary

Influenza infection results in an estimated 31 million outpatient visits, 55,000 to 974,200 hospitalizations, and 3,000 to 49,000 deaths. Membership in household in which someone else has influenza is the major risk factor for contracting influenza. The household secondary attack rate (SAR) is as high as 19% based on laboratory-confirmed influenza and 30% based on symptoms. Non-pharmaceutical preventive measures, including education, may play a role in decreasing transmission, but are only effective if started within 36 hours of symptom onset in index cases. Yet, most interventions are delayed because they are not initiated until care is sought. The investigators have demonstrated in one primarily Latino, urban community sample, that text messaging can be used to rapidly identify community members with influenza-like illness (ILI) early in an illness. This early identification would enable implementation of an educational intervention in the optimal time frame to reduce influenza transmission. Providing education within a text message is a proven successful strategy to influence behavior. Text messaging itself is scalable, low-cost, and can be used in low literacy populations. However, using text-message based surveillance to trigger a real-time text-message behavioral educational intervention to decrease household influenza transmission has not been assessed.


Clinical Trial Description

The study will enroll approximately 400 households with ≥1 child recruited from four contiguous communities in New York City. Households will be randomized, stratified by community 1:1 to receive surveillance-only (no text message education) vs. surveillance plus text message educational intervention. For symptom surveillance, households in both arms will receive text messages 3x/week during each influenza season and report if someone in the household has ILI symptoms. For those in the educational intervention arm, when an ILI/acute respiratory infections (ARI) is reported, a series of educational text messages will be sent with information to decrease household transmission. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03274310
Study type Interventional
Source Columbia University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date October 6, 2017
Completion date May 15, 2021

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