Cargando…

Effect of Text Messaging and Behavioral Interventions on COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake: A Randomized Clinical Trial

IMPORTANCE: COVID-19 vaccine uptake among urban populations remains low. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether text messaging with outbound or inbound scheduling and behaviorally informed content might increase COVID-19 vaccine uptake. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This randomized clinical trial with...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mehta, Shivan J., Mallozzi, Colleen, Shaw, Pamela A., Reitz, Catherine, McDonald, Caitlin, Vandertuyn, Matthew, Balachandran, Mohan, Kopinsky, Michael, Sevinc, Christianne, Johnson, Aaron, Ward, Robin, Park, Sae-Hwan, Snider, Christopher K., Rosin, Roy, Asch, David A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Association 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9194662/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35696165
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.16649
_version_ 1784726775664738304
author Mehta, Shivan J.
Mallozzi, Colleen
Shaw, Pamela A.
Reitz, Catherine
McDonald, Caitlin
Vandertuyn, Matthew
Balachandran, Mohan
Kopinsky, Michael
Sevinc, Christianne
Johnson, Aaron
Ward, Robin
Park, Sae-Hwan
Snider, Christopher K.
Rosin, Roy
Asch, David A.
author_facet Mehta, Shivan J.
Mallozzi, Colleen
Shaw, Pamela A.
Reitz, Catherine
McDonald, Caitlin
Vandertuyn, Matthew
Balachandran, Mohan
Kopinsky, Michael
Sevinc, Christianne
Johnson, Aaron
Ward, Robin
Park, Sae-Hwan
Snider, Christopher K.
Rosin, Roy
Asch, David A.
author_sort Mehta, Shivan J.
collection PubMed
description IMPORTANCE: COVID-19 vaccine uptake among urban populations remains low. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether text messaging with outbound or inbound scheduling and behaviorally informed content might increase COVID-19 vaccine uptake. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This randomized clinical trial with a factorial design was conducted from April 29 to July 6, 2021, in an urban academic health system. The trial comprised 16 045 patients at least 18 years of age in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with at least 1 primary care visit in the past 5 years, or a future scheduled primary care visit within the next 3 months, who were unresponsive to prior outreach. The study was prespecified in the trial protocol, and data were obtained from the intent-to-treat population. INTERVENTIONS: Eligible patients were randomly assigned in a 1:20:20 ratio to (1) outbound telephone call only by call center, (2) text message and outbound telephone call by call center to those who respond, or (3) text message, with patients instructed to make an inbound telephone call to a hotline. Patients in groups 2 and 3 were concurrently randomly assigned in a 1:1:1:1 ratio to receive different content: standard messaging, clinician endorsement (eg, “Dr. XXX recommends”), scarcity (“limited supply available”), or endowment framing (“We have reserved a COVID-19 vaccine appointment for you”). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was the proportion of patients who completed the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine within 1 month, according to the electronic health record. Secondary outcomes were the completion of the first dose within 2 months and completion of the vaccination series within 2 months of initial outreach. Additional outcomes included the percentage of patients with invalid cell phone numbers (wrong number or nontextable), no response to text messaging, the percentage of patients scheduled for the vaccine, text message responses, and the number of telephone calls made by the access center. Analysis was on an intention-to-treat basis. RESULTS: Among the 16 045 patients included, the mean (SD) age was 36.9 (11.1) years; 9418 (58.7%) were women; 12 869 (80.2%) had commercial insurance, and 2283 (14.2%) were insured by Medicaid; 8345 (52.0%) were White, 4706 (29.3%) were Black, and 967 (6.0%) were Hispanic or Latino. At 1 month, 14 of 390 patients (3.6% [95% CI, 1.7%-5.4%]) in the outbound telephone call–only group completed 1 vaccine dose, as did 243 of 7890 patients (3.1% [95% CI, 2.7%-3.5%]) in the text plus outbound call group (absolute difference, −0.5% [95% CI, −2.4% to 1.4%]; P = .57) and 253 of 7765 patients (3.3% [95% CI, 2.9%-3.7%]) in the text plus inbound call group (absolute difference, −0.3% [95% CI, −2.2% to 1.6%]; P = .72). Among the 15 655 patients receiving text messaging, 118 of 3889 patients (3.0% [95% CI, 2.5%-3.6%]) in the standard messaging group completed 1 vaccine dose, as did 135 of 3920 patients (3.4% [95% CI, 2.9%-4.0%]) in the clinician endorsement group (absolute difference, 0.4% [95% CI, −0.4% to 1.2%]; P = .31), 100 of 3911 patients (2.6% [95% CI, 2.1%-3.1%]) in the scarcity group (absolute difference, −0.5% [95% CI, −1.2% to 0.3%]; P = .20), and 143 of 3935 patients (3.6% [95% CI, 3.0%-4.2%]) in the endowment group (absolute difference, 0.6% [95% CI, −0.2% to 1.4%]; P = .14). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: There was no detectable increase in vaccination uptake among patients receiving text messaging compared with telephone calls only or behaviorally informed message content. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04834726
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9194662
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher American Medical Association
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-91946622022-07-05 Effect of Text Messaging and Behavioral Interventions on COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake: A Randomized Clinical Trial Mehta, Shivan J. Mallozzi, Colleen Shaw, Pamela A. Reitz, Catherine McDonald, Caitlin Vandertuyn, Matthew Balachandran, Mohan Kopinsky, Michael Sevinc, Christianne Johnson, Aaron Ward, Robin Park, Sae-Hwan Snider, Christopher K. Rosin, Roy Asch, David A. JAMA Netw Open Original Investigation IMPORTANCE: COVID-19 vaccine uptake among urban populations remains low. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether text messaging with outbound or inbound scheduling and behaviorally informed content might increase COVID-19 vaccine uptake. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This randomized clinical trial with a factorial design was conducted from April 29 to July 6, 2021, in an urban academic health system. The trial comprised 16 045 patients at least 18 years of age in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with at least 1 primary care visit in the past 5 years, or a future scheduled primary care visit within the next 3 months, who were unresponsive to prior outreach. The study was prespecified in the trial protocol, and data were obtained from the intent-to-treat population. INTERVENTIONS: Eligible patients were randomly assigned in a 1:20:20 ratio to (1) outbound telephone call only by call center, (2) text message and outbound telephone call by call center to those who respond, or (3) text message, with patients instructed to make an inbound telephone call to a hotline. Patients in groups 2 and 3 were concurrently randomly assigned in a 1:1:1:1 ratio to receive different content: standard messaging, clinician endorsement (eg, “Dr. XXX recommends”), scarcity (“limited supply available”), or endowment framing (“We have reserved a COVID-19 vaccine appointment for you”). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was the proportion of patients who completed the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine within 1 month, according to the electronic health record. Secondary outcomes were the completion of the first dose within 2 months and completion of the vaccination series within 2 months of initial outreach. Additional outcomes included the percentage of patients with invalid cell phone numbers (wrong number or nontextable), no response to text messaging, the percentage of patients scheduled for the vaccine, text message responses, and the number of telephone calls made by the access center. Analysis was on an intention-to-treat basis. RESULTS: Among the 16 045 patients included, the mean (SD) age was 36.9 (11.1) years; 9418 (58.7%) were women; 12 869 (80.2%) had commercial insurance, and 2283 (14.2%) were insured by Medicaid; 8345 (52.0%) were White, 4706 (29.3%) were Black, and 967 (6.0%) were Hispanic or Latino. At 1 month, 14 of 390 patients (3.6% [95% CI, 1.7%-5.4%]) in the outbound telephone call–only group completed 1 vaccine dose, as did 243 of 7890 patients (3.1% [95% CI, 2.7%-3.5%]) in the text plus outbound call group (absolute difference, −0.5% [95% CI, −2.4% to 1.4%]; P = .57) and 253 of 7765 patients (3.3% [95% CI, 2.9%-3.7%]) in the text plus inbound call group (absolute difference, −0.3% [95% CI, −2.2% to 1.6%]; P = .72). Among the 15 655 patients receiving text messaging, 118 of 3889 patients (3.0% [95% CI, 2.5%-3.6%]) in the standard messaging group completed 1 vaccine dose, as did 135 of 3920 patients (3.4% [95% CI, 2.9%-4.0%]) in the clinician endorsement group (absolute difference, 0.4% [95% CI, −0.4% to 1.2%]; P = .31), 100 of 3911 patients (2.6% [95% CI, 2.1%-3.1%]) in the scarcity group (absolute difference, −0.5% [95% CI, −1.2% to 0.3%]; P = .20), and 143 of 3935 patients (3.6% [95% CI, 3.0%-4.2%]) in the endowment group (absolute difference, 0.6% [95% CI, −0.2% to 1.4%]; P = .14). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: There was no detectable increase in vaccination uptake among patients receiving text messaging compared with telephone calls only or behaviorally informed message content. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04834726 American Medical Association 2022-06-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9194662/ /pubmed/35696165 http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.16649 Text en Copyright 2022 Mehta SJ et al. JAMA Network Open. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License.
spellingShingle Original Investigation
Mehta, Shivan J.
Mallozzi, Colleen
Shaw, Pamela A.
Reitz, Catherine
McDonald, Caitlin
Vandertuyn, Matthew
Balachandran, Mohan
Kopinsky, Michael
Sevinc, Christianne
Johnson, Aaron
Ward, Robin
Park, Sae-Hwan
Snider, Christopher K.
Rosin, Roy
Asch, David A.
Effect of Text Messaging and Behavioral Interventions on COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title Effect of Text Messaging and Behavioral Interventions on COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title_full Effect of Text Messaging and Behavioral Interventions on COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title_fullStr Effect of Text Messaging and Behavioral Interventions on COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Text Messaging and Behavioral Interventions on COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title_short Effect of Text Messaging and Behavioral Interventions on COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title_sort effect of text messaging and behavioral interventions on covid-19 vaccination uptake: a randomized clinical trial
topic Original Investigation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9194662/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35696165
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.16649
work_keys_str_mv AT mehtashivanj effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT mallozzicolleen effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT shawpamelaa effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT reitzcatherine effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT mcdonaldcaitlin effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT vandertuynmatthew effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT balachandranmohan effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT kopinskymichael effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT sevincchristianne effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT johnsonaaron effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT wardrobin effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT parksaehwan effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT sniderchristopherk effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT rosinroy effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial
AT aschdavida effectoftextmessagingandbehavioralinterventionsoncovid19vaccinationuptakearandomizedclinicaltrial