Conflict and Health (Oct 2018)

SMS-based smartphone application for disease surveillance has doubled completeness and timeliness in a limited-resource setting – evaluation of a 15-week pilot program in Central African Republic (CAR)

  • Ziad El-Khatib,
  • Maya Shah,
  • Samuel N Zallappa,
  • Pierre Nabeth,
  • José Guerra,
  • Casimir T Manengu,
  • Michel Yao,
  • Aline Philibert,
  • Lazare Massina,
  • Claes-Philip Staiger,
  • Raphael Mbailao,
  • Jean-Pierre Kouli,
  • Hippolyte Mboma,
  • Geraldine Duc,
  • Dago Inagbe,
  • Alpha Boubaca Barry,
  • Thierry Dumont,
  • Philippe Cavailler,
  • Michel Quere,
  • Brian Willett,
  • Souheil Reaiche,
  • Hervé de Ribaucourt,
  • Bruce Reeder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-018-0177-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background It is a challenge in low-resource settings to ensure the availability of complete, timely disease surveillance information. Smartphone applications (apps) have the potential to enhance surveillance data transmission. Methods The Central African Republic (CAR) Ministry of Health and Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) conducted a 15-week pilot project to test a disease surveillance app, Argus, for 20 conditions in 21 health centers in Mambéré Kadéi district (MK 2016). Results were compared to the usual paper-based surveillance in MK the year prior (MK 2015) and simultaneously in an adjacent health district, Nana-Mambére (NM 2016). Wilcoxon rank sum and Kaplan-Meier analyses compared report completeness and timeliness; the cost of the app, and users’ perceptions of its usability were assessed. Results Two hundred seventy-one weekly reports sent by app identified 3403 cases and 63 deaths; 15 alerts identified 28 cases and 4 deaths. Median completeness (IQR) for MK 2016, 81% (81–86%), was significantly higher than in MK 2015 (31% (24–36%)), and NM 2016 (52% (48–57)) (p < 0.01). Median timeliness (IQR) for MK 2016, 50% (39–57%) was also higher than in MK 2015, 19% (19–24%), and NM 2016 29% (24–36%) (p < 0.01). Kaplan-Meier Survival Analysis showed a significant progressive reduction in the time taken to transmit reports over the 15-week period (p < 0.01). Users ranked the app’s usability as greater than 4/5 on all dimensions. The total cost of the 15-week pilot project was US$40,575. It is estimated that to maintain the app in the 21 health facilities of MK will cost approximately US$18,800 in communication fees per year. Conclusions The app-based data transmission system more than doubled the completeness and timeliness of disease surveillance reports. This simple, low-cost intervention may permit the early detection of disease outbreaks in similar low-resource settings elsewhere.

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