Text message reminders for visit adherence among non-communicable disease patients in Haiti: A pilot study.

Clinic appointment compliance is a challenge to care continuity for people with chronic non-communicable diseases (NCD) globally. Short-message-service (SMS) text reminders have improved attendance in several settings but have not been tested in Haiti. This pilot study of an SMS reminder strategy to...

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Main Authors: Calixte Dawson, Sarah M Morris, Evyrna Toussaint, Darius Léopold Fénelon, Bolanle Banigbe, Gene F Kwan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLOS Global Public Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0004376
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author Calixte Dawson
Sarah M Morris
Evyrna Toussaint
Darius Léopold Fénelon
Bolanle Banigbe
Gene F Kwan
author_facet Calixte Dawson
Sarah M Morris
Evyrna Toussaint
Darius Léopold Fénelon
Bolanle Banigbe
Gene F Kwan
author_sort Calixte Dawson
collection DOAJ
description Clinic appointment compliance is a challenge to care continuity for people with chronic non-communicable diseases (NCD) globally. Short-message-service (SMS) text reminders have improved attendance in several settings but have not been tested in Haiti. This pilot study of an SMS reminder strategy to improve clinic attendance for NCD patients in Central Haiti assessed the feasibility and acceptability the messages. We included patients in the NCD clinic - adults with hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and heart failure; and children/young adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) - at Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais. Patients with appointments between December 13-22, 2021, were sent SMS reminders 3 days and 1 day before their visit. Patients completed a survey at their appointment evaluating the usefulness, acceptability, and feasibility of the reminders. We assessed barriers to receiving the SMS and how they influence clinic attendance. Ninety-six patients had a scheduled appointment during the study period. SMS reminders were sent to all patients with recorded phone numbers (91.2%). 72 patients (75%) attended their visit. Half of those who attended their visit received the SMS. Of these patients, 100% liked the reminder, 97.2% wanted to receive future messages, and 22.2% reported they would not have attended their visit without the reminder. Of the 36 patients who did not receive the SMS, 38.9% changed their phone number while 33.3% did not have access to a phone. Barriers to receiving the SMS were inconsistent cellular signal (25%) and lack of access to a phone (22%). Sending SMS reminders was feasible and acceptable to NCD patients. The messages were universally liked by the patients and positively influenced the decision of some to attend their visit. Barriers to uptake include updating phone numbers and access to phones. If implemented at scale, SMS reminders may improve appointment attendance in rural Haiti for those with mobile phones.
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spelling doaj-art-370c2a3de5f94db2a5f820bcd49e6aa62025-08-20T02:18:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLOS Global Public Health2767-33752025-01-0154e000437610.1371/journal.pgph.0004376Text message reminders for visit adherence among non-communicable disease patients in Haiti: A pilot study.Calixte DawsonSarah M MorrisEvyrna ToussaintDarius Léopold FénelonBolanle BanigbeGene F KwanClinic appointment compliance is a challenge to care continuity for people with chronic non-communicable diseases (NCD) globally. Short-message-service (SMS) text reminders have improved attendance in several settings but have not been tested in Haiti. This pilot study of an SMS reminder strategy to improve clinic attendance for NCD patients in Central Haiti assessed the feasibility and acceptability the messages. We included patients in the NCD clinic - adults with hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and heart failure; and children/young adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) - at Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais. Patients with appointments between December 13-22, 2021, were sent SMS reminders 3 days and 1 day before their visit. Patients completed a survey at their appointment evaluating the usefulness, acceptability, and feasibility of the reminders. We assessed barriers to receiving the SMS and how they influence clinic attendance. Ninety-six patients had a scheduled appointment during the study period. SMS reminders were sent to all patients with recorded phone numbers (91.2%). 72 patients (75%) attended their visit. Half of those who attended their visit received the SMS. Of these patients, 100% liked the reminder, 97.2% wanted to receive future messages, and 22.2% reported they would not have attended their visit without the reminder. Of the 36 patients who did not receive the SMS, 38.9% changed their phone number while 33.3% did not have access to a phone. Barriers to receiving the SMS were inconsistent cellular signal (25%) and lack of access to a phone (22%). Sending SMS reminders was feasible and acceptable to NCD patients. The messages were universally liked by the patients and positively influenced the decision of some to attend their visit. Barriers to uptake include updating phone numbers and access to phones. If implemented at scale, SMS reminders may improve appointment attendance in rural Haiti for those with mobile phones.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0004376
spellingShingle Calixte Dawson
Sarah M Morris
Evyrna Toussaint
Darius Léopold Fénelon
Bolanle Banigbe
Gene F Kwan
Text message reminders for visit adherence among non-communicable disease patients in Haiti: A pilot study.
PLOS Global Public Health
title Text message reminders for visit adherence among non-communicable disease patients in Haiti: A pilot study.
title_full Text message reminders for visit adherence among non-communicable disease patients in Haiti: A pilot study.
title_fullStr Text message reminders for visit adherence among non-communicable disease patients in Haiti: A pilot study.
title_full_unstemmed Text message reminders for visit adherence among non-communicable disease patients in Haiti: A pilot study.
title_short Text message reminders for visit adherence among non-communicable disease patients in Haiti: A pilot study.
title_sort text message reminders for visit adherence among non communicable disease patients in haiti a pilot study
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0004376
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