| Literature DB >> 28818817 |
Craig Dalton1,2, Sandra Carlson2, Michelle Butler2, Daniel Cassano2, Stephen Clarke3, John Fejsa2, David Durrheim1,2.
Abstract
Flutracking is a weekly Web-based survey of influenza-like illness (ILI) in Australia that has grown from 400 participants in 2006 to over 26,000 participants every week in 2016. Flutracking monitors both the transmission and severity of ILI across Australia by documenting symptoms (cough, fever, and sore throat), time off work or normal duties, influenza vaccination status, laboratory testing for influenza, and health seeking behavior. Recruitment of Flutrackers commenced via health department and other organizational email systems, and then gradually incorporated social media promotion and invitations from existing Flutrackers to friends to enhance participation. Invitations from existing participants typically contribute to over 1000 new participants each year. The Flutracking survey link was emailed every Monday morning in winter and took less than 10 seconds to complete. To reduce the burden on respondents, we collected only a minimal amount of demographic and weekly data. Additionally, to optimize users' experiences, we maintained a strong focus on "obvious design" and repeated usability testing of naïve and current participants of the survey. In this paper, we share these and other insights on recruitment methods and user experience principles that have enabled Flutracking to become one of the largest online participatory surveillance systems in the world. There is still much that could be enhanced in Flutracking; however, we believe these principles could benefit others developing similar online surveillance systems. ©Craig Dalton, Sandra Carlson, Michelle Butler, Daniel Cassano, Stephen Clarke, John Fejsa, David Durrheim. Originally published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (http://publichealth.jmir.org), 17.08.2017.Entities:
Keywords: World Wide Web; epidemiology; influenza; surveillance; user centered design
Year: 2017 PMID: 28818817 PMCID: PMC5579323 DOI: 10.2196/publichealth.7333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Public Health Surveill ISSN: 2369-2960
Figure 1Number of participants completing at least one survey by year, 2006 to 2016, Flutracking, Australia.
Figure 2Percentage of participants who completed <20% to 90-100% of the 26 Flutracking surveys conducted in 2015.
Figure 3Five-year participation survival curve of 1400 survey respondents who joined in 2011 based on gender.
Figure 4Screenshot of first screen of the flutracking.net survey, 2016.