Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06160999

Improving Uptake of Pediatric Vaccines Through Religious Conferences and Vaccines-in-a-van in Aceh, Indonesia

TABRIE: Trusted Faces, Familiar Places (CGHE)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
2,400 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Michigan · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this cluster, randomized controlled trial is to study the impact of mobile vaccine clinics and religious conferences on pediatric vaccination coverage. The main questions will be: does vaccination coverage change in geographic areas with the mobile vaccine clinics vs those areas without mobile vaccine clinics; and does vaccination coverage change in geographic areas with religious conferences on vaccination vs those areas without religious conferences. In repeated surveys, adult participants will respond about their children's vaccination status. Participants will not be individually randomized to the interventions. Rather, their geographical area will be randomized.

Detailed description

This project seeks to create a paradigm shift in how the public views and utilizes vaccination services. Currently, community health centers remain the default setting for vaccination, and clinicians the default administrators. However, the general population may have difficulty accessing these clinics or trusting traditional vaccination providers, particularly if they are members of marginalized communities that have experienced medical discrimination. This project applies a two-pronged approach by addressing issues of trust and ease of access among the general population. This project is innovative by: a) mobilizing religious communities to discuss vaccines (to counter reported lack of information about vaccines among unvaccinated families) and b) training more community health workers in vaccination and in physically delivering vaccines through a "Vaccine-in-a-van" concept to facilitate ease in accessing vaccines. By mobilizing these individuals in the community settings where people live, work, worship, and learn, this project will expand vaccine information and services. More specifically, this project plans to work with local health leaders in a low vaccination community in Aceh, Indonesia to identify social institutions that are part of children and families' daily lives; these could include houses of worship, schools, or community centers. This project will fund a mobile vaccine delivery unit to go to these locations to physically bring vaccines to the people and to link them with existing immunization clinic infrastructure. This project will also work towards changing the culture of child health and vaccination through substantial discussions and conversations with multiple levels of religious leaders at conferences.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALReligious conferencesThe conference will invite local subdistrict-level imams and other religious leaders, along with a range of community health workers, including those not traditionally trained to give vaccines. During the conference there will be some sessions with everyone, and some that are broken down by profession. The conference topics will be developed in conjunction with the religious leaders, but will focus on the importance of infant health
BEHAVIORALVaccine-in-a-vanFor the vaccine-in-a-van concept, our community health worker will travel to different areas in the test subdistricts. These locations will be decided on in conjunction with the local health department and the research team's knowledge of the area. We will target areas which would have families with young children, particularly: schools, mosques, and sports fields. The purpose of the van will be to bring vaccines to the community, but also to put a human face (our community health worker) to vaccines outside of a clinical setting.

Timeline

Start date
2023-09-01
Primary completion
2025-12-31
Completion
2025-12-31
First posted
2023-12-07
Last updated
2026-01-16

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Indonesia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06160999. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.