Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
250000 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-02-07
2022-01-01
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Our secondary research question concerns which type of text reminder is more effective. To study this question, we will nest a 2x3 factorial design within the text-message arm. The first factor has two levels and is whether the text message focuses on patients' personal benefits or prosocial benefits. The second factor has three levels and is whether the text message highlights the early access patients have to the vaccine, whether it highlights that the vaccine offers the promise of a fresh start, or neither.
* In the Holdout arm: patients will not receive a second text message about COVID-vaccine.
* In the text-message arm, all participants will receive a text message that invites them to schedule their vaccination appointment and includes a link to the appointment website
* In the Self-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect themselves from COVID.
* In the Prosocial-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect their family, friends, and community from COVID.
* In the Early access + self-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that they have early access to COVID-19 vaccine and should take the opportunity to protect themselves from COVID.
* In the Early access + prosocial-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that they have early access to COVID-19 vaccine and should take the opportunity to protect their family, friends, community from COVID.
* In the Fresh start + self-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that the vaccine offers the promise of a fresh start and they should take the opportunity to protect themselves from COVID and chart a new path forward.
* In the Early access + prosocial-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that the vaccine offers the promise of a fresh start and they should take the opportunity to protect their family, friends, community from COVID and help our nation chart a new path forward.
Patients will enter our study on a rolling basis, as they become eligible to get the vaccine (and if they fit our inclusion criteria for receiving the second text message). Those in the text-message arm will receive the second text message on the workday on or closest to the 8th day following the first text message. Specifically, if t denotes the date of the first text message, then t+8 is the 8th day following the first text message.If t+8 is Saturday, the second text message will be sent on Friday; if t+8 is Sunday, the second text message will be sent on Monday. We will measure a) whether patients schedule a COVID-19 vaccination appointment for the first dose and b) whether and when patients get the first dose of COVID-19 vaccine.
The study will stop assigning patients to the early access + self-benefit sub-arm OR the early access + prosocial-benefit sub-arm when UCLA health opens appointments to everyone regardless of priority status related to age, health conditions or occupations. This will be done because at this point the concept of early access is likely no longer credible. At that point, we will randomize future patients eligible for our study at a 1:4 ratio into the holdout control arm and a text-message arm that receives a second text message. Within the text-message arm, we will nest a 2x2 factorial design, where the two factors will be a) whether the text message will focus on patients' personal benefits or prosocial benefits and b) whether or not the text message highlights that the vaccine offers the promise of a fresh start.
Analysis:
For the main analysis, we will run ordinary least squares regressions (OLS) with robust standard errors to predict the aforementioned outcome variables, except that we will use a Cox proportional hazards model with administrative censoring to predict time of obtaining the first COVID-19 vaccine. The significance level will be 0.05. Our primary hypothesis is that the text-message arm is significantly better than the holdout arm, so our primary analysis will compare the six text-message sub-arms altogether with the holdout group.
Our secondary analysis will investigate whether (1) the three sub-arms highlighting self-benefits, (2) the three sub-arms highlighting prosocial benefits, (3) the two sub-arms highlighting early access, and (4) the two sub-arms highlighting fresh start are better than the holdout arm.
Furthermore, we will test (1) the effect of highlighting prosocial benefits (vs. self-benefits), (2) the effect of highlighting early access, (3) the effect of highlighting the promise of a fresh start, (4) whether the combination of early access and prosocial benefits will outperform early access alone or prosocial benefits alone, and (5) whether the combination of fresh start and prosocial benefits will outperform fresh start alone or prosocial benefits alone.
Our regressions will include the following control variables:
* Participant age
* Indicators for participant race/ethnicity (Black non-Hispanic, Hispanic, Asian non-Hispanic, white non-Hispanic, other/mixed, unknown; white non-Hispanic omitted)
* Whether the patient's preferred language is Spanish (which affects the language of text)
* Indicators for participant gender (male, female, other/unknown)
* Social vulnerability index score
* COVID19 Risk Factors Model
* Indicators for the batches of patients (patients will become eligible and receive initial communications in batches)
As a robustness check, we will re-run the analysis as a logit regression (instead of an OLS regression) for binary outcome variables.
We will explore the following moderators:
* Whether the patient is female or male
* Whether the patient is Black, Caucasian, Hispanic, or other
* Whether the patient's preferred language is Spanish
* Whether the patient is 65+ (including 65) or below 65
* Patient's Social vulnerability index score
* Patient's COVID risk score
* Patient's population risk score
* Whether the patient is married (which is a proxy for whether they live together with family members)
* Whether or not the patient received a flu shot in either the 2019-2020 season or the 2020-2021 flu season prior to receiving our text message according to the patient's medical record
* The day of the week when the text message is sent to a patient. We will compare each day of the week.
* How strongly the participant's neighborhood is in favor of the Republican (vs. Democratic) Party if UCLA Health eventually agrees to provide de-identified address (e.g., zipcode)
* The arm that patients were assigned to for the first text message (see our pre-registration for the RCT related to the first text message at NCT04800965)
* Number of days between the date the first batch of patients received the initial invitation to get COVID vaccine at UCLA Health and the date a patient in question received the initial invitation
* The number of patients who have received the initial invitation to get COVID vaccine at UCLA Health before a patient in question received the initial invitation.
Plan for Early and Subsequent Analyses
To inform policy as soon as possible, we plan to first assess the effects of our interventions in the early phase of vaccination outreach at UCLA Health. For this purpose, we plan to first analyze the data from the start of this RCT to the end of February. Given that we are using a 6-day time window for our primary dependent variable, we will examine data from patients who are randomized to either the holdout or text-message arm in this RCT before or on Feb 23, 2021. For this population, we will test:
1. whether the text-message arm is significantly better than the holdout arm;
2. whether the three sub-arms highlighting self-benefits, the three sub-arms highlighting prosocial benefits, the two sub-arms highlighting early access, and the two sub-arms highlighting fresh start are better than the holdout arm.
3. we will report the raw data for each sub-arm without conducting hypothesis testing across conditions that are not pre-registered in (1)-(4).
In our early analysis, we will include controls that are available to us (it is possible that we do not have all of the controls described above at the time of early report).
However, if by Feb 23, we do not reach 40K (which gives us 80% power to detect a 2pp difference between the holdout arm and the text message arm, assuming that holdout arm has a 50% baseline) for this RCT, we will only report estimated treatment effects and 95% confidence intervals but we will not perform any hypothesis testing.
After all UCLA patients have been invited (or if vaccine distribution plan changes and UCLA Health no longer sends out text messages to patients at some point), we will do the following additional analyses:
* If the additional data collected afterward exceeds 40K (which gives us 80% power to detect a 2pp difference between the holdout arm and the text message arm), then we will analyze the main effect of sending a text message (vs. holdout) and report the raw data for each sub-arm (to see if the patterns are qualitatively comparable with those in the early data).
* If we do not reach the sample size for the early analysis, then we will use all the data (including the early data and subsequent data) to analyze the aforementioned questions for the early data.
* We will use the full sample (including the early data and subsequent data) to analyze (1) the effect of highlighting prosocial benefits (vs. self-benefits), (2) the effect of highlighting early access, (3) the effect of highlighting the promise of a fresh start, (4) whether the combination of early access and prosocial benefits will outperform early access alone or prosocial benefits alone, and (5) whether the combination of fresh start and prosocial benefits will outperform fresh start alone or prosocial benefits alone, and (6) the aforementioned heterogeneous treatment effects.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Holdout Arm
In the Holdout arm: patients will not receive a second text message about COVID-vaccine.
No interventions assigned to this group
Self-benefit sub-arm
In the Self-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect themselves from COVID.
Self-benefit
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect themselves from COVID.
Prosocial-benefit sub-arm
In the Prosocial-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect their family, friends, and community from COVID.
Prosocial-benefit
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect their family, friends, and community from COVID
Early-access and self-benefit sub-arm
In the Early access + self-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that they have early access to COVID-19 vaccine and should take the opportunity to protect themselves from COVID.
Self-benefit
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect themselves from COVID.
Early access
Participants will be reminded that they have early access to COVID-19 vaccine.
Early-access and prosocial-benefit sub-arm
In the Early access + prosocial-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that they have early access to COVID-19 vaccine and should take the opportunity to protect their family, friends, community from COVID.
Prosocial-benefit
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect their family, friends, and community from COVID
Early access
Participants will be reminded that they have early access to COVID-19 vaccine.
Fresh start and self-benefit sub-arm
In the Fresh start + self-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that the vaccine offers the promise of a fresh start and they should take the opportunity to protect themselves from COVID and chart a new path forward.
Self-benefit
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect themselves from COVID.
Fresh start
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine offers the promise of a fresh start and chart a new path forward.
Fresh start and prosocial-benefit sub-arm
In the Early access + prosocial-benefit sub-arm, participants will be reminded that the vaccine offers the promise of a fresh start and they should take the opportunity to protect their family, friends, community from COVID and help our nation chart a new path forward.
Prosocial-benefit
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect their family, friends, and community from COVID
Fresh start
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine offers the promise of a fresh start and chart a new path forward.
Interventions
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Self-benefit
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect themselves from COVID.
Prosocial-benefit
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine helps protect their family, friends, and community from COVID
Early access
Participants will be reminded that they have early access to COVID-19 vaccine.
Fresh start
Participants will be reminded that the vaccine offers the promise of a fresh start and chart a new path forward.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* They have a mobile phone number or SMS capable phone number in UCLA Health's database
* They are eligible for receiving the COVID-19 vaccine at UCLA Health
* They have not already scheduled an appointment the day before the scheduled time of the text message
* They are at or above 18 years old
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Carnegie Mellon University
OTHER
University of California, Los Angeles
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Daniel M. Croymans, MD, MBA, MS
Medical Director of Quality, Dept of Medicine
Locations
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UCLA Health Department of Medicine, Quality Office
Westwood, Los Angeles, California, United States
Countries
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References
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Brewer NT, Chapman GB, Rothman AJ, Leask J, Kempe A. Increasing Vaccination: Putting Psychological Science Into Action. Psychol Sci Public Interest. 2017 Dec;18(3):149-207. doi: 10.1177/1529100618760521.
Volpp KG, Loewenstein G, Buttenheim AM. Behaviorally Informed Strategies for a National COVID-19 Vaccine Promotion Program. JAMA. 2021 Jan 12;325(2):125-126. doi: 10.1001/jama.2020.24036. No abstract available.
Dai, H., Milkman, K. L., & Riis, J. (2014). The fresh start effect: Temporal landmarks motivate aspirational behavior. Management Science, 60(10), 2563-2582.
Other Identifiers
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IRB#21-000268 (2)
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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