Journal ArticleUnknown
Use of mobile phones for improving vaccination coverage among children living in rural hard-to-reach areas and urban streets of Bangladesh
Authors
Author Affiliations
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Stanford University, Johns Hopkins University, Duke Institute for Health Innovation, ...
Published InVaccine
Year2015
Citations162
Abstract
In Bangladesh, full vaccination rates among children living in rural hard-to-reach areas and urban streets are low. We conducted a quasi-experimental pre-post study of a 12-month mobile phone intervention to improve vaccination among 0–11 months old children in rural hard-to-reach and urban street dweller areas. Software named “mTika” was employed within the existing public health system to electronically register each child’s birth and remind mothers about upcoming vaccination dates with text messages. Android smart phones with mTika were provided to all health assistants/vaccinators and supervisors in intervention areas, while mothers used plain cell phones already owned by themselves or their families. Pre and post-intervention vaccination coverage was surveyed in intervention and control areas. Among children over 298 days old, full…
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