| Literature DB >> 23374585 |
Chai S Prue1, Kerry L Shannon, Jacob Khyang, Laura J Edwards, Sabeena Ahmed, Malathi Ram, Timothy Shields, Mohammad S Hossain, Gregory E Glass, Myaing M Nyunt, David A Sack, David J Sullivan, Wasif A Khan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The recent introduction of mobile phones into the rural Bandarban district of Bangladesh provided a resource to improve case detection and treatment of patients with malaria.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23374585 PMCID: PMC3585886 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-12-48
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Cell phone calls and malaria case detection by month. Temporal pattern of total calls (green line) received by research staff indicating gradual increase in use of cell phones soon after service introduction in the local unions, peaking during peak malaria months yet remaining above 20 calls a month. Of those tested as a result of calls, total positive malaria cases (blue line) cluster in May-October, particularly in 2011, and cases testing negative for malaria (red line) peaking during the same season, but remaining higher for most of the year than the positive cases.
Figure 2Symptomatic cases of malaria detected with or without cell phone over time. The field study’s passive surveillance case detection of symptomatic individuals tested in their home shifted from a minority of case detection initiated by cell phones at the end of 2010 and early 2011 to a majority of detected malaria cases initiated by mobile phone contact by mid 2011 and 2012.
Cell phone survey results
| Cell phone ownership (N = 4,632 households) | 842 (18.2%): Own 1 phone |
| 126 (2.7%): Own more than 1 phone | |
| 81 (1.7%): Have access to borrowing a phone (if didn’t own) | |
| 3,583 (77.4%): No access to phones | |
| Reasons for not owning/using phone (N = 3,583) | 1782 (49.7%) Never needed to use one |
| 1449 (40.4%): Cannot afford it | |
| 214 (6.0%): Connection/coverage problems | |
| 138 (3.9%): Don’t know how to use one | |
| Use of phone for medical purposes (N = 968) | 546 (56.4%): Yes |
| 422 (43.6%): No | |
| If yes, for what specific purpose (N = 546) | 461(84.4%): Emergency medical care |
| 65 (11.9%): Malaria services | |
| 20 (3.7%): Other services | |
| If currently receiving health messages (N = 968) | 292 (30.2%): Yes |
| 24 (2.5%): No | |
| 652 (67.4%): Don’t know | |
| Text messaging use (N = 968) | 468 (48.3%): Use text messaging (all or some of the time) |
| 500 (51.7%): Never use text messaging | |
| If use text messaging, preference on type (N = 468) | 394 (84.2%): Prefer words and pictures |
| | |
| 73 (15.6%): Prefer words only | |
| 1 (0.2%): Prefer pictures only | |
| If medication reminders would be helpful (N = 968) | 675 (69.7%): Yes |
| 18 (1.9%): No | |
| 275 (28.4%): Don’t know |
Survey was conducted between July 2011, and July 2012 among the 4,632 households in the study area.
Figure 3Cell phone distribution in 2 unions. Map of mobile phones in households for year 2010 by self-report from mobile phone specific survey initiated as an additional project. 1401 households in yellow have mobile phones and 3239 in red were without mobile phones. The distribution was widespread with all but a few household clusters with nearby access to mobile phones.