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Clinical Trial Summary

Vaccines are one of the best public health tools available to achieve the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) # 4 of decreasing child mortality. A major reason for poor childhood vaccine coverage is the lack of awareness among parents regarding the need for immunization in children, and the importance of completing the entire series of vaccines. This result in significant drop-out between vaccines delivered at birth and later in the infancy period. New innovative methods involving technologies are needed to be employed to increase the vaccine coverage. This study is being conducted in Karachi, Pakistan and main study objective is

• To assess the effectiveness of SMS reminders on cell phones in improving the compliance of subsequent visits for routine immunization for children.


Clinical Trial Description

Pakistan has the 4th highest burden of child mortality in the world with over 60% of all deaths due to infectious diseases, many of them vaccine-preventable. Vaccines are one of the best public health tools available to achieve the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) # 4 of decreasing child mortality. The immunization coverage in Pakistan is still well below the desired level, leading to continued polio transmission, large measles outbreaks and thousands of deaths from vaccine-preventable illnesses. Mobile phone use has seen a tremendous rise in Pakistan in this decade. There are greater than100 million mobile phones subscribers in Pakistan. Short message service (SMS) as a reminder tool can be extremely effective in health care settings at public health scale. Customized SMS messages can be designed as personally tailored messages with text and/or pictures, and used to remind and inquire parents regarding vaccination for their children according to the EPI schedule. A major advantage of SMS as a communication tool is that automated messages can be generated at specific times through computer programming, hence minimizing the need for valuable human resources. Messages are delivered directly with minimal intrusiveness, while maintaining privacy of the household members. Most importantly, the cost of sending automated SMS messages is extremely low, once the original infrastructure is established. We plan to test the effectiveness of reminders to parents/guardians on cell phones through short messaging system (SMS) in improving the on-time routine immunization for children in Pakistan. This study will be conducted in an urban- squatter settlement area, in Karachi where the Aga Khan University's Department of Paediatrics and Child Health is conducting an active demographic surveillance on maternal and child health. Our experimental plan has three components: First, we will conduct baseline survey of parents at our study sites to explore their preferences for text for immunization reminders. Simultaneously, we will develop a computerized application for reminders scheduling. This application will contain the phone number, message information, language preferences and date on which the message will be sent. It will be interfaced with the gateway to send the message. Lastly, we will conduct a randomized controlled trial to determine the effectiveness of automated SMS reminders to parents in improving the on-time vaccination rates in children. If the result shows that the vaccines compliance can be increased through the SMS reminders, this program can be incorporated with the existing systems to collect the cell phone numbers of parents at the time of child's first contact with the health system and sending auto generated reminders for vaccine compliance at national level. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Health Services Research


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01859546
Study type Interventional
Source Aga Khan University
Contact
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date March 2013
Completion date December 2013

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