The use of mobile phones as a data collection tool: a report from a household survey in South Africa. Tomlinson, M., Solomon, W., Singh, Y., Doherty, T., Chopra, M., Ijumba, P., Tsai, A. C, & Jackson, D. BMC medical informatics and decision making, 9:51, December, 2009. Publisher: BioMed Central
Paper doi abstract bibtex BACKGROUND To investigate the feasibility, the ease of implementation, and the extent to which community health workers with little experience of data collection could be trained and successfully supervised to collect data using mobile phones in a large baseline survey METHODS A web-based system was developed to allow electronic surveys or questionnaires to be designed on a word processor, sent to, and conducted on standard entry level mobile phones. RESULTS The web-based interface permitted comprehensive daily real-time supervision of CHW performance, with no data loss. The system permitted the early detection of data fabrication in combination with real-time quality control and data collector supervision. CONCLUSIONS The benefits of mobile technology, combined with the improvement that mobile phones offer over PDA's in terms of data loss and uploading difficulties, make mobile phones a feasible method of data collection that needs to be further explored.
@article{tomlinson_use_2009,
title = {The use of mobile phones as a data collection tool: a report from a household survey in {South} {Africa}.},
volume = {9},
issn = {1472-6947},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20030813},
doi = {10.1186/1472-6947-9-51},
abstract = {BACKGROUND To investigate the feasibility, the ease of implementation, and the extent to which community health workers with little experience of data collection could be trained and successfully supervised to collect data using mobile phones in a large baseline survey METHODS A web-based system was developed to allow electronic surveys or questionnaires to be designed on a word processor, sent to, and conducted on standard entry level mobile phones. RESULTS The web-based interface permitted comprehensive daily real-time supervision of CHW performance, with no data loss. The system permitted the early detection of data fabrication in combination with real-time quality control and data collector supervision. CONCLUSIONS The benefits of mobile technology, combined with the improvement that mobile phones offer over PDA's in terms of data loss and uploading difficulties, make mobile phones a feasible method of data collection that needs to be further explored.},
urldate = {2019-10-21},
journal = {BMC medical informatics and decision making},
author = {Tomlinson, Mark and Solomon, Wesley and Singh, Yages and Doherty, Tanya and Chopra, Mickey and Ijumba, Petrida and Tsai, Alexander C and Jackson, Debra},
month = dec,
year = {2009},
pmid = {20030813},
note = {Publisher: BioMed Central},
pages = {51},
}
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