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Effects of call reminders, short message services (SMS) reminders, and SMS immunization facts on childhood routine vaccination timing and completion in Ilorin, Nigeria

Rasheedat Mobolaji Ibraheem, Moshood Adebayo Akintola, Mohammed Baba Abdulkadir, Hafsat Abolore Ameen, Oladimeji Akeem Bolarinwa, Man Adeboye

2021African Health Sciences39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Reminders via mobile devices deployed as short message services (SMS) or calls have been identified to be a useful strategy in improving routine immunization uptake in several countries. OBJECTIVE: To identify the timeliness of appointments with reminders (calls or SMS), SMS health education and the routine care, and the vaccination completion rates in Ilorin, Nigeria. METHOD: Mother-infant pairs presenting for the first vaccination appointment were randomized into four (three interventions, one control) groups, each consisting of 140 participants. Intervention groups were reminders via calls (A), SMS reminders (B), immunization fact SMS messages (C) and controls on usual care (D). Reminders were made a day before the appointment while SMS immunization facts were sent at five weeks, nine weeks and eight months. Appropriate timing was defined as the scheduled visit ±3 days. RESULTS: The immunization completion rates after the nine months' visit were 99.2%, 99.3%, 97% and 90.4% for Groups A, B, C and D respectively. Compared with controls, Group A had the highest odds [AOR 8.78 (6.10, 12.63)] of presenting at an appropriate time, followed by Group B [AOR 2.56 (1.96, 3.35)], then Group C [AOR 2.44 (1.87, 3.18)]. CONCLUSION: Reminders/SMS immunization facts improve vaccination completion rates.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineShort Message ServiceVaccinationImmunizationText messagePsychological interventionPediatricsFamily medicineMedical emergencyNursingImmunologyAntigenOperating systemComputer scienceComputer networkMobile Health and mHealth ApplicationsICT in Developing CommunitiesVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy