View clinical trials related to Incentives.
Filter by:The goal of this substudy is to determine if a brief single-session-intervention (SSI) coupled with different incentive strategies to support engaging in wellness-related activities.
Background and Objective: Tanzania is one of 20 countries where the majority of un- and under-vaccinated children reside. Prior research identified substantial rural-urban disparities in rates and timeliness of childhood vaccination in Tanzania, with children in rural settings being more like to receive delayed or no vaccinations. This type 1 effectiveness implementation hybrid study will evaluate the effect of Chanjo Kwa Wakati ("Timely Vaccination" in Kiswahili), a community-based, integrated digital health intervention, on vaccination timeliness. The intervention combines a vaccination knowledge intervention, mobile phone-based reminders, and incentives with the goal to promote timely childhood vaccinations. Methods: The study will be conducted in two predominantly rural regions in Tanzania with high numbers of un- or under-vaccinated children. Forty rural health facilities and their catchment areas ("clusters") will be randomized to an early or delayed onset study arm. From each cluster, three cohorts of mother-child dyads, one retrospective cohort and two prospective cohorts, will be enrolled into the study. For all vaccines due during the first year of life, timeliness (primary outcome) and coverage (secondary outcome) will be observed for 1200 children (600 intervention children and 600 non-intervention children). Study logs, fidelity checklists, quantitative surveys, vaccination records, and qualitative interviews with mothers and key informants will be used to inform the five constructs of the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework. Results will be used to develop an implementation blueprint that can guide future adaptations, sustainability, and scale-up of Chanjo Kwa Wakati. Hypothesis: The hypothesis is that Chanjo Kwa Wakati is effective for increasing the timeliness of childhood vaccinations due by age 1 year compared to the standard of care. Expected impact: This study will address the lack of rigorous evidence on the effectiveness of an community-based digital health intervention for promoting vaccination coverage and timeliness among children from sub-Saharan Africa, and identify implementation strategies to facilitate the deployment of integrated vaccination interventions in low- and middle-income country settings.
Immunization is one of the most cost-effective and successful public health strategy in reducing the health, economic and societal burden of many infectious diseases. Pakistan and Afghanistan remain the only countries where polio is endemic, and Pakistan reports the most cases in the world. Although the rate is lower than in previous years, the situation remains alarming. This study objective is to decrease polio vaccine refusals and zero-dose vaccines by motivating behaviour change
This study aims to evaluate the feasibility and compare the preliminary effect of vaping cessation program consisting of media literacy education and real-time text messaging support and leverage insights from behavioral economics to enhance social and financial incentives to improve program engagement, and eventually abstinence. Our hypotheses are that 1) the Combined arm is associated with improved vaping abstinence to the Media literacy and Financial incentive arms; and 2) the financial incentive-related arms (either Combined or Financial incentive) enhance engagement compared to the non-incentive related arms.
This randomized control trial will test an economic intervention to reduce Kenyan men's engagement in behaviors that increase the risk of HIV/STIs. Participants randomized to the intervention group will be able to open accounts with a partner bank and will be incentivized to save with lottery-based rewards.
The overarching goal of this study is to improve the health of women and children in rural areas of Uganda through strengthening of the community health workforce, which provides critical health services to the rural poor.
The objective of this study is to investigate the impact of incentives on clinical trial participation. 1) characterize key stakeholders' views on and assessment of incentives, 2) reach consensus among stakeholders on the factors to be considered when choosing incentives and their relative importance, 3) pilot test using vignettes for incentive decision making. We hypothesize that potential study participants make trade-offs regarding the characteristics of a research study when deciding whether to volunteer. This amendment is to document IRB reliance between UCR and USF.
Smoking during pregnancy has harmful effects on both mother and unborn child. Studies have shown that small rewards can help smokers to quit. In our current study, we ask how such rewards are most effective in supporting smoking cessation in pregnancy.
In this study the investigators will adapt and strengthen, test effectiveness, and explore implementation of conditional lottery incentive linkage strategies to engage men in HIV care and ART in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
This research seeks to examine psychological factors that may impact relationship between incentives and health behavior engagement, specifically physical activity. Additionally, it will compare the impact of two different incentive schedules on behavior engagement, one providing immediate rewards (i.e. rewards received on a daily basis) and another providing delayed rewards (i.e. rewards received at the end of the study period), with an active self-monitoring intervention condition in which no rewards are offered. Study participants will provide reports of their physical activity each day for three weeks, and in the two incentive conditions, they will receive small monetary rewards for their physical activity. Following the three week reporting and reward period, participants will complete two additional assessments, measuring psychological constructs and behavior engagement following the cessation of rewards. The study will also examine how cognitive and anthropomorphic factors may contribute to intervention response and the effects on psychological constructs.