Using SMS to increase vaccination rates among secondary school kids

The Australian Government’s National Immunisation Program funds a variety of vaccines, including the three-dose Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine.

In Victoria, this is delivered by local councils through secondary schools. However, many students whose parents or guardians have consented to the vaccination are not getting all three doses, partly because some of them miss the school session.

Councils don’t usually send reminders prior to school visits. However, research in similar contexts has shown it may be an effective way of improving vaccination rates.

The challenge:
How to get secondary school students to get all three doses of the HPV vaccine
Partners:
Department of Premier and Cabinet (Public Sector Innovation Fund and Behavioural Insights Unit) and Department of Health & Human Services.
When:
2017

What did we do?

We investigated the effectiveness of Short-Message-Service (SMS) reminders in increasing vaccination rates by conducting a Randomised Controlled Trial with 4,386 students whose parents/guardians had consented to vaccination.

Methodology

The parents/guardians were allocated into three groups. Two groups received SMS messages. One message used a motivational technique while the other used self-regulatory framing (i.e. making plans). The third (control) group did not receive an SMS.

Results

The research revealed that the SMS reminders improved vaccination rates by 3.29% in the intervention groups.

This may sound like a small increase but is significant in the broader context and may be a useful technique in contributing to ‘herd immunity’ – the point at which enough of the population is vaccinated to eliminate a communicable disease over time.

Have a project for us?

We'd love to help you unpack the problem. Get in touch.

Thanks for your interest.

Your message has been received.
We'll be in touch shortly.

Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.