Smart Linkage to Care : Evaluation Report

Many new HIV cases are lost to follow-up before they can be enrolled in care and treatment programs. This report summarises a proof-of-concept evaluation of a mHealth intervention which aims to improve linkage of newly diagnosed HIV cases to care....

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Main Authors: Venter, W.D. Francois, Coleman, Jesse, Chan, Vincent Lau, Phatsoane, Mothepane, Shubber, Zara, Fraser, Nicole
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/374611542662090016/Smart-Linkage-to-Care-Evaluation-Report
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30862
id okr-10986-30862
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-308622021-05-25T09:19:52Z Smart Linkage to Care : Evaluation Report Venter, W.D. Francois Coleman, Jesse Chan, Vincent Lau Phatsoane, Mothepane Shubber, Zara Fraser, Nicole SMARTPHONE PUSH NOTIFICATION APPOINTMENT REMINDER SOFTWARE APPLICATION HIV AIDS HEALTH SERVICES Many new HIV cases are lost to follow-up before they can be enrolled in care and treatment programs. This report summarises a proof-of-concept evaluation of a mHealth intervention which aims to improve linkage of newly diagnosed HIV cases to care. The design was a randomised controlled multi-center trial enrolling consenting patients in clinics in Inner-city Johannesburg. The trial developed and tested the “SmartLink” app which is designed to make laboratory data directly available to patients via a secure account and send them appointment reminder and notifications on their smartphone. The primary endpoint was linkage to care in the first 8 months after diagnosis, as evidenced by a HIV-related laboratory test. The report provides the key findings on phone ownership of the target group, and which demographics can best be reached via apps and data-based communication (which is cheaper and offers more scope than text messaging). The app worked best in younger HIV patients under 30 years of age, who had their linkage to HIV care improved by 20 percent through the app. This younger age group is difficult to reach with traditional interventions, and reacted positively to a technology solution. The unique feature of this custom-made app (sending real-time CD4/VL test data from the laboratory database to HIV clients) is highly scalable among smartphone owners. 2018-11-20T21:10:14Z 2018-11-20T21:10:14Z 2018-04 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/374611542662090016/Smart-Linkage-to-Care-Evaluation-Report http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30862 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Health Study Economic & Sector Work Africa South Africa
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic SMARTPHONE
PUSH NOTIFICATION
APPOINTMENT REMINDER
SOFTWARE APPLICATION
HIV AIDS
HEALTH SERVICES
spellingShingle SMARTPHONE
PUSH NOTIFICATION
APPOINTMENT REMINDER
SOFTWARE APPLICATION
HIV AIDS
HEALTH SERVICES
Venter, W.D. Francois
Coleman, Jesse
Chan, Vincent Lau
Phatsoane, Mothepane
Shubber, Zara
Fraser, Nicole
Smart Linkage to Care : Evaluation Report
geographic_facet Africa
South Africa
description Many new HIV cases are lost to follow-up before they can be enrolled in care and treatment programs. This report summarises a proof-of-concept evaluation of a mHealth intervention which aims to improve linkage of newly diagnosed HIV cases to care. The design was a randomised controlled multi-center trial enrolling consenting patients in clinics in Inner-city Johannesburg. The trial developed and tested the “SmartLink” app which is designed to make laboratory data directly available to patients via a secure account and send them appointment reminder and notifications on their smartphone. The primary endpoint was linkage to care in the first 8 months after diagnosis, as evidenced by a HIV-related laboratory test. The report provides the key findings on phone ownership of the target group, and which demographics can best be reached via apps and data-based communication (which is cheaper and offers more scope than text messaging). The app worked best in younger HIV patients under 30 years of age, who had their linkage to HIV care improved by 20 percent through the app. This younger age group is difficult to reach with traditional interventions, and reacted positively to a technology solution. The unique feature of this custom-made app (sending real-time CD4/VL test data from the laboratory database to HIV clients) is highly scalable among smartphone owners.
format Report
author Venter, W.D. Francois
Coleman, Jesse
Chan, Vincent Lau
Phatsoane, Mothepane
Shubber, Zara
Fraser, Nicole
author_facet Venter, W.D. Francois
Coleman, Jesse
Chan, Vincent Lau
Phatsoane, Mothepane
Shubber, Zara
Fraser, Nicole
author_sort Venter, W.D. Francois
title Smart Linkage to Care : Evaluation Report
title_short Smart Linkage to Care : Evaluation Report
title_full Smart Linkage to Care : Evaluation Report
title_fullStr Smart Linkage to Care : Evaluation Report
title_full_unstemmed Smart Linkage to Care : Evaluation Report
title_sort smart linkage to care : evaluation report
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/374611542662090016/Smart-Linkage-to-Care-Evaluation-Report
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30862
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