1. Validation of a Mobile Health Technology Platform (FeverTracker) for Malaria Surveillance in India: Development and Usability Study
- Author
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Bishal Debnath, Dibyajyoti Chutia, Debabrata Tripathy, Amit Sharma, Suman Ch Nag, Suraj Debbarma, Manju Rahi, Harpreet Kaur, Ujjwal Sarkar, Jotish Debbarma, Aatreyee Nath, Rabindra Tripura, Jyoti Chhibber-Goel, Nirapada Das, Kanwar Narain, Nilay Nishant, Guneram Reang, Rislyn Debbarma, Avinash Chouhan, P. L. N. Raju, Jayanta Debnath, Kamal Joy Tripura, Dipanjan Dasgupta, Kongkona Gogoi, Rocky Pebam, Ipsita Pal Bhowmick, and Rajashree Roy
- Subjects
fever ,Original Paper ,mobile phone ,Disease surveillance ,Short Message Service ,business.industry ,malaria ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Health technology ,Health Informatics ,Usability ,medicine.disease ,mHealth app ,Computer Science Applications ,Mobile phone ,parasitic diseases ,Health care ,surveillance ,medicine ,Web application ,health system ,Medical emergency ,business ,Malaria - Abstract
Background A surveillance system is the foundation for disease prevention and control. Malaria surveillance is crucial for tracking regional and temporal patterns in disease incidence, assisting in recorded details, timely reporting, and frequency of analysis. Objective In this study, we aim to develop an integrated surveillance graphical app called FeverTracker, which has been designed to assist the community and health care workers in digital surveillance and thereby contribute toward malaria control and elimination. Methods FeverTracker uses a geographic information system and is linked to a web app with automated data digitization, SMS text messaging, and advisory instructions, thereby allowing immediate notification of individual cases to district and state health authorities in real time. Results The use of FeverTracker for malaria surveillance is evident, given the archaic paper-based surveillance tools used currently. The use of the app in 19 tribal villages of the Dhalai district in Tripura, India, assisted in the surveillance of 1880 suspected malaria patients and confirmed malaria infection in 93.4% (114/122; Plasmodium falciparum), 4.9% (6/122; P vivax), and 1.6% (2/122; P falciparum/P vivax mixed infection) of cases. Digital tools such as FeverTracker will be critical in integrating disease surveillance, and they offer instant data digitization for downstream processing. Conclusions The use of this technology in health care and research will strengthen the ongoing efforts to eliminate malaria. Moreover, FeverTracker provides a modifiable template for deployment in other disease systems.
- Published
- 2021