Abstract

In-person (face-to-face) data collection methods offer many advantages but can also be time-consuming and expensive, particularly in areas of difficult access. We take advantage of the increasing mobile phone penetration rate in rural areas to evaluate the feasibility of using cell phones to monitor the provision of key health and nutrition interventions linked to the first 1,000 days of life, a critical period of growth and development. We examine response rates to calendarized text messages (SMS) and phone calls sent to 1,542 households over a period of four months. These households have children under two years old and pregnant women and are located across randomly selected communities in Quiche, Guatemala. We find that the overall (valid) response rate to phone calls is over 5 times higher than to text messages (75.8% versus 14.4%). We also test whether simple SMS reminders improve the timely reception of health services but do not find any effects in this regard. Language, education, and age appear to be major barriers to respond to text messages as opposed to phone calls, and the rate of response is not correlated with a household’s geographic location (accessibility). Moreover, response veracity is high, with an 84–91% match between household responses and administrative records. The costs per monitored intervention are around 1.12 US dollars using text messages and 85 cents making phone calls, with the costs per effective answer showing a starker contrast, at 7.76 and 1.12 US dollars, respectively. Our findings indicate that mobile phone calls can be an effective, low-cost tool to collect reliable information remotely and in real time. In the current context, where in-person contact with households is not possible due to the COVID-19 crisis, phone calls can be a valuable instrument for collecting information, monitoring development interventions, or implementing brief surveys.

Highlights

  • Development programs and interventions are often implemented across remote, isolated areas

  • This paper evaluates the feasibility of monitoring the provision of health and nutrition interventions in rural, remote areas in the department of Quiche, located in the Western Highlands of Guatemala, by directly engaging with end-users through text messages ( SMS) and calls to their mobile phones

  • We find a very low overall response rate to questions asked via SMS, at 14.4%, similar to that obtained during the pilot study in Chiquimula, at 12.3%

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Summary

Introduction

Development programs and interventions are often implemented across remote, isolated areas. This paper evaluates the feasibility of monitoring the provision of health and nutrition interventions in rural, remote areas in the department of Quiche, located in the Western Highlands of Guatemala, by directly engaging with end-users through text messages ( SMS) and calls to their mobile phones. A study in Denmark found a high concordance between SMS responses and retrospective telephone interviews among low back pain patients [24], while a recent study in Malawi showed that mobile-phone interviews could offer a low-cost alternative to assess the strength of implementation of a family planning program [25] We contribute to both strands of the literature by comparing the benefits of two alternative modes of communication (SMS and phone calls) within the same context using experimental methods. We inform the robustness of such data collection tools in a context of rugged geography and linguistic heterogeneity and offer preliminary evidence on the accuracy and veracity of direct household responses by comparing these with administrative data

Materials and methods
Study design
Results and discussion
Concluding remarks
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