Combining Healthcare-Based and Participatory Approaches to Surveillance: Trends in Diarrheal and Respiratory Conditions Collected by a Mobile Phone System by Community Health Workers in Rural Nepal

Surveillance systems are increasingly relying upon community-based or crowd-sourced data to complement traditional facilities-based data sources. Data collected by community health workers during the routine course of care could combine the early warning power of community-based data collection with...

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Published inPloS one Vol. 11; no. 4; p. e0152738
Main Authors Meyers, David J, Ozonoff, Al, Baruwal, Ashma, Pande, Sami, Harsha, Alex, Sharma, Ranju, Schwarz, Dan, Schwarz, Ryan K, Bista, Deepak, Halliday, Scott, Maru, Duncan S R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 25.04.2016
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:Surveillance systems are increasingly relying upon community-based or crowd-sourced data to complement traditional facilities-based data sources. Data collected by community health workers during the routine course of care could combine the early warning power of community-based data collection with the predictability and diagnostic regularity of facility data. These data could inform public health responses to epidemics and spatially-clustered endemic diseases. Here, we analyze data collected on a daily basis by community health workers during the routine course of clinical care in rural Nepal. We evaluate if such community-based surveillance systems can capture temporal trends in diarrheal diseases and acute respiratory infections. During the course of their clinical activities from January to December 2013, community health workers recorded healthcare encounters using mobile phones. In parallel, we accessed condition-specific admissions from 2011-2013 in the hospital from which the community health program was based. We compared diarrhea and acute respiratory infection rates from both the hospital and the community, and assigned three categories of local disease activity (low, medium, and high) to each week in each village cluster with categories determined by tertiles. We compared condition-specific mean hospital rates across categories using ANOVA to assess concordance between hospital and community-collected data. There were 2,710 cases of diarrhea and 373 cases of acute respiratory infection reported by community health workers during the one-year study period. At the hospital, the average weekly incidence of diarrhea and acute respiratory infections over the three-year period was 1.8 and 3.9 cases respectively per 1,000 people in each village cluster. In the community, the average weekly rate of diarrhea and acute respiratory infections was 2.7 and 0.5 cases respectively per 1,000 people. Both diarrhea and acute respiratory infections exhibited significant differences between the three categories of disease rate burden (diarrhea p = 0.009, acute respiratory infection p = 0.001) when comparing community health worker-collected rates to hospital rates. Community-level data on diarrhea and acute respiratory infections modestly correlated with hospital data for the same condition in each village each week. Our experience suggests that community health worker-collected data on mobile phones may be a feasible adjunct to other community- and healthcare-related data sources for surveillance of such conditions. Such systems are vitally needed in resource-limited settings like rural Nepal.
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Competing Interests: DJM is employed at a private university (Harvard University). DJM, AH, DS, RKS, SH, and DSRM all work in partnership with a nonprofit healthcare company (Possible) that delivers free healthcare in rural Nepal using funds from the Government of Nepal and other public, philanthropic, and private foundation sources. DB is employed by Possible. AB and SP were employed by Possible during the course of the research study. AO, DS, RKS, and DSRM are employed at an academic medical center (Boston Children's Hospital) that receives public sector research funding, as well as revenue through private sector fee-for-service medical transactions and private foundation grants. AO and DSRM are faculty and AH is a medical student at a private university (Harvard Medical School); AH receives a scholarship to pursue her research. SP is employed by a multilateral aid agency (United Nations Population Fund) that receives multilateral funding from numerous countries. RS is employed by a non-profit technology company (Medic Mobile) that receives philanthropic funding. DS, RKS, SH, and DSRM are employed at an academic medical center (Brigham and Women's Hospital) that receives public sector research funding, as well as revenue through private sector fee-for-service medical transactions and private foundation grants. SH is also employed part-time at a public university (University of Washington). DS and RKS serve as advisors to Possible, and receive no compensation. DSRM is a non-voting member on Possible's Board of Directors, but receives no compensation. All authors have read and understood PLOS ONE's policy on declaration of interests, and declare no competing financial interests. The authors do, however, believe strongly that healthcare is a public good, not a private commodity.
Conceived and designed the experiments: DJM DSRM AO DS RS. Performed the experiments: DJM AB SP AH RS DB DSRM. Analyzed the data: DJM AO. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: AH RS. Wrote the paper: DJM AO SH DSRM.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0152738