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Comparing Technological and Relational Approaches to Support Families After a Missed Well Child Visit
Sponsor: Wake Forest University Health Sciences
Summary
The overall goal of this study is to compare the effectiveness of different follow up protocols for scheduled but not attended ("no-show") Well-Child Visits, relative to care-as-usual (no standardized or typical follow up procedure). The main goals are to: * Demonstrate feasibility of merging a new referral protocol following Well-Child visit no-show into existing health system Community Health Worker resources. * Compare Well-Child Visit attendance following no-show between patients randomized to care-as-usual (comparison), text message only (low-touch intervention), and community health worker outreach (high-touch intervention) groups. * Define the costs and cost-effectiveness of different follow-up protocols.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
Any - 17 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
5885
Start Date
2025-01-09
Completion Date
2026-04
Last Updated
2025-10-29
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Low-touch: texting
Text message: The patients' primary caregiver will be sent up to three text messages spaced one week apart, starting at one week post no-show. The message will identify the child by the first name and give information about the missed visit (date, time, clinic location) and how to reschedule (by clinic-specific phone number, and/or directing the patient to myatriumhealth.org). If a patient has a newly scheduled well-child visit on file prior to all three text messages being sent, messages will be stopped.
High-touch: Community health worker outreach
Community health worker (CHW) outreach: Within approximately one week of patient enrollment and randomization to the high-touch intervention arm, the community health worker will call the primary phone number in the patient's record. Up to three phone call attempts will be made and logged for this number, then a fourth and final attempt will be made to reach the secondary contact phone number in the patient's health record. If the caregiver is successfully reached, the CHW intervention will be limited to one phone call in which the CHW will assess reason(s) why the patient missed the appointment, will screen for social and other needs, and will assist in rescheduling the missed appointment and addressing potential barriers to attendance.
Locations (1)
Department of Family and Community Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States