Back to Search Start Over

Willingness of Mothers to Receive Reminders for Routine Vaccination Appointments in Northern Nigeria: A Multi-Centre Cross-Sectional Study

Authors :
B. I. Garba
Mohammed Baba Abdulkadir
Rasaki Aliu
Rasheedat Mobolaji Ibraheem
Moshood Adebayo Akintola
Afeez Oyesola Bello
Grace Ahmed
Rabiu Hashim
Amina Hannatu Sambo
Olayinka Rasheed Ibrahim
Lawal Magaji Ibrahim
Salihu Sheni Mohammed
Source :
Journal of Tropical Pediatrics. 67
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

BackgroundRoutine vaccination, a cost-effective means of preventing deadly childhood disease, has a low coverage in Nigeria. The study assessed the willingness of mothers to receive reminder messages for routine vaccination appointments in Northern Nigeria.MethodsA multi-centre cross-sectional study involving at least 363 mother–infant pairs per centre from five states in Northern Nigeria. Data collected include the socio-demographic details, responses on parental phone ownership, mothers’ willingness to receive reminders for immunization appointments and the reminder type characteristics. Data analysis was done with SPSS.ResultsOf the 1952 mother–infant pairs, ownership of at least one household phone was 97.7%. In total, 1613 (82.6%) mothers were willing to receive reminders. A majority (62.2%) of mothers preferred phone calls. A day before the vaccination appointment was the preferred timing (78.1%), and the predominant communication language was the local language for each region.The odds of being willing to receive reminders were 3.1 times, 2.6 times and 1.8 times higher in those with no formal education, primary education and secondary education, respectively, compared with mothers with tertiary education, each p < 0.05. Mothers who delivered at home were significantly less likely to want reminder messages (p = 0.03).ConclusionEight of 10 women in Northern Nigeria are willing to receive a reminder for their child. The predominant mode of reminder preferred is phone calls using the local language. Deployment of mobile phone reminders strategy in Northern Nigeria as a means to improve vaccination uptake is feasible. The institution of this strategy can be in collaboration with service providers.

Details

ISSN :
14653664 and 01426338
Volume :
67
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Tropical Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d7f80f524f46fa06be1d6830362ff423
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/tropej/fmab085