Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, B065, 13123 E. 16th Ave., Aurora, CO 80045, USA; Center for Global Health, Colorado School of Public Health, A090, 13199 E. Montview Blvd., Suite 310, Aurora, CO 80045, USA.
Center for Health Studies, Universidad del Valle de Guatemala, 18 Av. 11-95, Zona 15, Vista Hermosa III, Guatemala City, Guatemala.
Vaccine. 2019 Sep 30;37(42):6192-6200. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.08.046. Epub 2019 Sep 3.
Millions of infants worldwide remain under-immunized and at risk for unnecessary morbidity and mortality. Text messaging may offer a low-cost solution. We aimed to evaluate text message reminders to improve infant immunization in Guatemala.
A randomized clinical trial was conducted at four public health clinics in rural and urban Guatemala. Infants ages six weeks to six months presenting for the first visit of the primary immunization series were randomly and equally allocated to an intervention or usual care group. Intervention participants were sent three text reminders before the second and third vaccine visits. The main outcome was timeliness of the second and third visits of the primary immunization series.
Of 1088 families approached for enrollment between March to November 2016, 871 were eligible and 720 (82.7%) participated; only 54 families did not own a cell phone. Due to country-wide vaccine shortages, visit completion was used as a proxy for overall immunization coverage. In intention to treat analysis, both intervention and usual care groups had high rates of visit completion, but intervention participants presented on the scheduled date more often (151 [42.2%] of 358 intervention vs. 111 [30.7%] of 362 usual care participants for visit 2, p = 0.001, and 112 [34.0%] of 329 intervention vs. 90 [27.0%] of 333 usual care participants for visit 3, p = 0.05). Intervention caregivers were significantly more likely to want to receive future text message reminders for vaccines and other appointments and were more willing to pay for these reminders.
Caregivers who were sent text message reminders in urban and rural Guatemala were less delayed for their child's immunization visits and reported high user satisfaction. Text message reminders may be an effective tool to increase infant vaccination coverage in low-income settings by reminding parents to vaccinate.
NCT02567006 at clinicaltrials.gov.
全球仍有数百万婴儿未接种疫苗,面临不必要的发病率和死亡率风险。短信提醒可能是一种低成本的解决方案。我们旨在评估短信提醒对改善危地马拉婴儿免疫接种的效果。
在危地马拉的四个农村和城市公共卫生诊所进行了一项随机临床试验。6 周至 6 个月大的婴儿在首次接受初级免疫系列接种时,随机平均分配到干预组或常规护理组。干预组参与者在第二次和第三次疫苗接种前会收到三条短信提醒。主要结果是评估第二次和第三次初级免疫系列接种的及时性。
在 2016 年 3 月至 11 月期间,有 1088 个家庭被邀请参加研究,其中 871 个家庭符合条件并参与了研究;只有 54 个家庭没有手机。由于全国范围内的疫苗短缺,以完成接种作为总体免疫覆盖率的替代指标。在意向治疗分析中,干预组和常规护理组的接种完成率都很高,但干预组更常在预定日期就诊(第 2 次就诊时,干预组有 151 名[42.2%]患者,常规护理组有 111 名[30.7%]患者,p=0.001;第 3 次就诊时,干预组有 112 名[34.0%]患者,常规护理组有 90 名[27.0%]患者,p=0.05)。干预组的看护人更愿意接受未来有关疫苗接种和其他预约的短信提醒,并且更愿意为这些提醒付费。
在危地马拉的城市和农村地区,接收短信提醒的看护人在孩子的免疫接种就诊时延误的可能性较小,并且报告了较高的用户满意度。短信提醒可能是一种有效的工具,通过提醒父母接种疫苗,增加低收入环境中婴儿疫苗接种覆盖率。
NCT02567006,在 clinicaltrials.gov 上注册。