Australian CANcer patients’ perspectives on coronavirus VACCination Survey (CANVACCS): Short Messaging Service recruitment outcomes

Sam Harris, Hieu Chau, Bryan A. Chan, Catherine Offer, Carrie Donohue, Alastair Kwok, Mike Nguyen, Nathan Bain, Lisa Bernadette Grech, Daphne Day, Amelia McCartney, Kate Webber, Vi Luong, Tahlia McDevitt, Eva Segelov

Research output: Contribution to journalMeeting Abstractpeer-review

Abstract

Aims: Short Messaging Service (SMS) have been shown to be a useful recruitment strategy for survey participation in various disease but are not commonly used to recruit cancer populations. This analysis reports the use of SMS to recruit cancer patients attending four health services to participate in an online survey about COVID-19 vaccination.

Methods: Between June and August 2021, the CANVACCS study was conducted at one metropolitan health service: Monash Health (MH), and three regional services: Bendigo Health (BH) and Latrobe Regional Hospital (LRH), in Victoria, and Sunshine Coast Hospital and Health Service (SCHHS) in southern Queensland. Invitation to participate in the CANVACCS survey was sent centrally by SMS from each health service to patients with an oncology appointment scheduled during the next 6 months. A follow-up SMS was sent three days later. The proportion of older patients (aged ≥65 years) who responded was collected.

Results: Patients with a mobile phone number were sent SMS invitations at MH (5132), BH (1049), LRH (719), and SCHHS (1627). The proportion of invited patients aged ≥65 years at MH, BH, and SCHHS was 2484 (48.4%), 566 (54.0%), and 858 (52.7%), respectively. At MH, BH, LRH, and SCHHS, 699 (13.6%), 257 (24.6%), 141 (19.6%) and 296 (17.4%) responses were collected, respectively. The proportion of respondents aged ≥65 was 266 (38.1%), 128 (49.8%), 73 (51.8%), and 141 (47.6%), respectively. Comparatively, the proportion of respondents aged < 65 was 433 (61.9%), 129 (50.2%), 68 (48.2%), and 155 (52.4%), respectively. The majority of responses occurred within one week of the SMS recruitment.

Conclusions: SMS recruitment is a viable and likely underused method for recruitment of a large number of cancer patients in a short time span. Older patients and regional-based patients are able to participate despite preconceptions that they may be underrepresented in recruitment using this technology.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)146-147
Number of pages2
JournalAsia-Pacific Journal of Clinical Oncology
Volume17
Issue numberSuppl 9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 11 Nov 2021
EventClinical Oncology Society of Australia Annual Scientific Meeting 2021: Cancer care and research: Learning from the past and improving the future - virtual
Duration: 16 Nov 202118 Nov 2021
Conference number: 48th
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/17437563/2021/17/S9

Keywords

  • cancer
  • study recruitment
  • Short message service
  • targeted recruitment

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