Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05964842

Using SMS Reminders, Phone Calls and Money Incentives to Enhance Linkage to Care of Presumptive TB Patients in Uganda

Using Short Message Service Reminders, Phone Calls and Mobile Money Incentives to Enhance Linkage to Care of Presumptive Tuberculosis Patients in Uganda: a Randomised Controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
2,355 (actual)
Sponsor
Makerere University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The major challenge in meeting the WHO's End TB Strategy- reducing tuberculosis (TB) deaths by 90% and incidence by 80% is the cascading patient loss-to-follow-up (LTFU) along the continuum of TB care. A systematic review found high levels of pre-treatment LTFU-ranging from 4 to 38%, and was higher in sub-Saharan Africa (18%) compared to Asia (13%). Consequences of pre-diagnosis and pre-treatment LTFU are; untreated TB patients are infectious and can transmit TB to others and not starting TB treatment at all, causes high morbidity and mortality. Therefore, monitoring outcomes of presumptive TB patients is equally important as monitoring treatment outcomes. Short message service (SMS), phone calls and mobile money (MM) incentives have shown promise by improving health outcomes such as uptake of immunization, adherence to TB treatment and antiretroviral therapy (ART). However, there is limited knowledge their effect in increasing linkage to care and treatment for presumptive TB patients in Uganda and sub-Saharan Africa. The aim of this study is therefore to leverage SMS reminders, phone call and MM incentives in improving linkage to care of presumptive TB patients. This will be a five arm multi-center individual randomized controlled trial implemented in selected high-volume health facilities in Uganda among 1548 presumptive TB patients. The study population will be presumptive TB patients aged 18 years and above identified within the study facilities who do not complete TB diagnosis same day. Completion of TB diagnosis will refer to submitting a sample and obtaining results from the test. Our hypothesis is that using SMS reminders, phone call and Mobile Money incentives will result in increase in the proportion of presumptive TB patients that complete diagnosis and pre-treatment TB cases that initiate treatment.

Detailed description

The major challenge in meeting the WHO's End TB Strategy- reducing TB deaths by 90% and incidence by 80% is the cascading patient loss-to-follow-up (LTFU) along the continuum of TB care. Patients can be lost to follow-up after being identified as presumptive TB cases and never get to test for TB (pre-diagnosis LTFU) or those who test and are confirmed to have TB, can also be lost and never start TB treatment (pre-treatment LTFU). A systematic review found high levels of pre-treatment LTFU-ranging from 4 to 38%, and was higher in sub-Saharan Africa (18%) compared to Asia (13%). Consequences of pre-diagnosis and pre-treatment LTFU are; untreated TB patients are infectious and can transmit TB to others and not starting TB treatment at all, causes high morbidity and mortality. Therefore, monitoring outcomes of presumptive TB patients is equally important as monitoring treatment outcomes. Short message service (SMS), phone calls and mobile money (MM) incentives have shown promise by improving health outcomes such as uptake of immunization, adherence to TB treatment and ART. However, there is limited knowledge their effect in increasing linkage to care and treatment for presumptive TB patients in Uganda and sub-Saharan Africa. The aim of this study is therefore to leverage SMS reminders, phone call and MM incentives in improving linkage to care of presumptive TB patients. This will be a five arm multi-center individual randomized controlled trial implemented in selected high-volume health facilities in Uganda among 1548 presumptive TB patients. The study population will be presumptive TB patients aged 18 years and above identified within the study facilities who do not complete TB diagnosis same day. Completion of TB diagnosis will refer to submitting a sample and obtaining results from the test. The study arms will include; i) Standard of care (SOC - control group) ii) SMS only iii) phone call only iv) SMS and MM incentive v) Phone call and MM incentive Our hypothesis is that using SMS reminders, phone call and Mobile Money incentives will result in increase in the proportion of presumptive TB patients that complete diagnosis and pre-treatment TB cases that initiate treatment.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSMSParticipants in this arm will receive three SMS reminders. The first SMS will be sent on day one after enrollment into the study. The second SMS will be sent once participant results are ready. If two days after the second SMS the patient has not returned to complete TB diagnosis, a third SMS will be sent. Messages will be automatically sent in either English or Luganda, the commonly spoken local language in the study area. The preferred language of the participant will be determined at enrollment.
BEHAVIORALPhone callParticipants in this arm will receive three phone call reminders. The first phone call will be made on day one after enrollment into the study. The second phone call will be made once participant results are ready. If two days after the second phone call the patient has not returned to complete TB diagnosis, a third phone call will be made. Phone calls will be made in either English or Luganda, the commonly spoken local language in the study area. The preferred language of the participant will be determined at enrollment.
BEHAVIORALMobile money incentiveOnce participants in the study arms with mobile money complete TB diagnosis by submitting a sputum sample and collecting back results, a money incentive worth 20,000/= (Twenty thousand shillings only) will be given as a transport refund sent via mobile money.

Timeline

Start date
2023-08-14
Primary completion
2024-05-31
Completion
2024-05-31
First posted
2023-07-28
Last updated
2024-10-23

Locations

5 sites across 1 country: Uganda

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05964842. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.