| Literature DB >> 32070433 |
Megan L Srinivas1, Eileen J Yang2,3, Priyanka Shrestha3,4, Dan Wu3, Rosanna W Peeling3, Joseph D Tucker2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diagnostics are essential for identifying and controlling diseases. However, limited access to diagnostics hinders public health efforts in many settings. Social innovation may provide a framework for expanding access to diagnostics in the global south. Here social innovation is defined as implementing a known public health tool via a novel, community-driven technique. MAIN BODY: In this article, we discuss three diverse cases that show the potential for using social innovation in diagnostics. The cases chosen for inclusion here demonstrate the importance of social innovation in diagnostics across different geographic, cultural, and health system contexts. They include malaria testing via schools in Malawi, cervical human papillomavirus (HPV) sample self-collection in Peru, and crowdsourcing human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing in China. For each case, we present the public health problem and the impact of using social innovation to increase accessibility of diagnostics. We discuss implications of each diagnostic approach and the importance of social innovation in creating these potential solutions. We argue that social innovation is useful in improving the delivery of essential diagnostic tools in low- and middle-income countries.Entities:
Keywords: Crowdsourcing, HIV testing; Diagnostics; Malaria, HPV cervical testing; Social innovation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32070433 PMCID: PMC7029594 DOI: 10.1186/s40249-020-0633-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Poverty ISSN: 2049-9957 Impact factor: 4.520
Fig. 1The diagram of cases selection. TDR: Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases
Fig. 2Social innovation in diagnostics for malaria, HPV and HIV. HPV: Cervical human papillomavirus; HIV: Human immunodeficiency virus
Scalability in social innovation
| Social innovation approach/model | Current scope | Potential for scale up | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Malawi - malaria LTK | Utilizing teachers to diagnose/treat malaria in school-age children | This specific study was conducted in Malawi, but similar models targeting malaria and other parasites have been successfully implemented in other countries as well. | Similar interventions could be implemented in schools in malaria endemic regions to improve rates of malaria diagnosis/treatment amongst school-age children. |
| Peru - HPV cervical sample self collection | Increasing HPV testing rates in rural Peruvian women through facilitating self-collection of cervical samples | This intervention took place in rural and resource-poor suburban communities within Peru. Similar interventions have been used in Uganda, Haiti, and Argentina. | Self-collection sampling techniques could be relevant in many areas where there is poor uptake of HPV screening and strong networks of local women to run and support the program. |
| China - crowdsourcing for HIV testing | Creating more culturally sensitive and impactful materials to promote HIV testing among MSM through an online crowdsourcing contest | This crowdsourcing contest was held in China, but crowdsourcing challenge contests in various forms have been successfully conducted in many global contexts (HIV testing RCT trial, protein folding/genome hackathons, etc.). | Crowdsourcing challenge contests could be useful in soliciting promotional materials for a variety of stigmatized diseases, such as hepatitis B/C and syphilis. |
HPV Human papillomavirus, HIV Human immunodeficiency virus, LTK Learner Treatment Kit