scholarly journals Implementing automated subject selection methodology in an epidemiological survey using open source application, Open Data Kit (ODK) (Preprint)

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ganeshkumar Parasuraman ◽  
Sabarinathan Ramasamy ◽  
Chokkalingam D ◽  
Vinay Urs ◽  
Ritvik Amarchand ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Data collection in field-based public health research influences the quality and outcome of the research which in turn aids in developing evidence-based policymaking. As conventional data collection methods are either consume more time or more resources, usage of the cost-effective technology solution is required. Open Data Kit (ODK), the open-source application being designed for an Android-based platform is one such solution to electronic data collection. OBJECTIVE To demonstrate the functionality of ODK in implementing subject selection algorithm Kish methodology in epidemiological research studies METHODS Subject selection algorithms in field-based surveys are done manually and one such algorithm is Kish algorithm. Incorporating subject selection algorithm electronically in ODK application was not either tested or reported in the literature. We developed an application framework to build-in Kish grid algorithm in ODK application RESULTS The process and steps for setting up subject selection Kish algorithm to embed in ODK application are explained with syntax function. The application displayed the selected eligible adult on the screen after it runs the syntax function based on the Kish algorithm in the backend CONCLUSIONS ODK is an enterprise architecture, which is identified to develop a mobile application for a community based public health survey. The application would reduce the time taken for selecting and completing the interview of study participants. Ever a minor change like spell check on form mandates complete XML generation in ODK application and requires to update the existing entire application

2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 158-168
Author(s):  
Ayi Purbasari ◽  
Wanda Gusdya ◽  
Ferry Mulyanto ◽  
Vina Fitria Nurlatifah

The Open Data Kit (ODK) originated as a google.org initiative where research efforts were focused on applying technology to assist developing countries in the health and environment sectors. ODK is an open-source tool that helps organizations, writers / researchers, field workers, and manage mobile data collection solutions. Its goal is to create open-source and standards-based tools that are easy to try, easy to use, easy to modify and easy to measure. This research was conducted to help teachers and Korwil Operators to collect and manage teacher attendance data at each elementary school in Ciater sub-district by utilizing the Open Data Kit as a medium for collecting and managing primary school teacher attendance data. This research was conducted by conducting literature studies, interviews and observations, and studying the use of the Open Data Kit. Furthermore, the stages will be carried out to define the needs of analysis, design and implementation. The final result of this research is a presence data collection application that utilizes the Open Data Kit as a medium consisting of ODK Collect as a data collection tool and ODK Aggregate as a tool for managing data.  


2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 605-619 ◽  
Author(s):  
Turry Ouma ◽  
Agnes Kavoo ◽  
Cornelius Wainaina ◽  
Busayo Ogunya ◽  
Margaret Karanja ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Omosivie Maduka ◽  
Godwin Akpan ◽  
Sylvester Maleghemi

BACKGROUND Data collection in Sub-Saharan Africa has traditionally been paper-based. However, the popularization of Android mobile devices and data capture software has brought paperless data management within reach. We used Open Data Kit (ODK) technology on Android mobile devices during a household survey in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to describe the pros and cons of deploying ODK for data management. METHODS A descriptive cross-sectional household survey was carried out by 6 data collectors between April and May 2016. Data were obtained from 1706 persons in 601 households across 6 communities in 3 states in the Niger Delta. The use of Android mobile devices and ODK technology involved form building, testing, collection, aggregation, and download for data analysis. The median duration for data collection per household and per individual was 25.7 and 9.3 min, respectively. RESULTS Data entries per device ranged from 33 (33/1706, 1.93%) to 482 (482/1706, 28.25%) individuals between 9 (9/601, 1.5%) and 122 (122/601, 20.3%) households. The most entries (470) were made by data collector 5. Only 2 respondents had data entry errors (2/1706, 0.12%). However, 73 (73/601, 12.1%) households had inaccurate date and time entries for when data collection started and ended. The cost of deploying ODK was estimated at US $206.7 in comparison with the estimated cost of US $466.7 for paper-based data management. CONCLUSIONS We found the use of mobile data capture technology to be efficient and cost-effective. As Internet services improve in Africa, we advocate their use as effective tools for health information management.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Marks ◽  
Sham Lal ◽  
Hannah Brindle ◽  
Pierre-Stéphane Gsell ◽  
Matthew MacGregor ◽  
...  

Background: ODK provides software and standards that are popular solutions for off-grid electronic data collection and has substantial code overlap and interoperability with a number of related software products including CommCare, Enketo, Ona, SurveyCTO, and KoBoToolbox. These tools provide open-source options for off-grid use in public health data collection, management, analysis, and reporting. During the 2018–2020 Ebola epidemic in the North Kivu and Ituri regions of Democratic Republic of Congo, we used these tools to support the DRC Ministère de la Santé RDC and World Health Organization in their efforts to administer an experimental vaccine (VSV-Zebov-GP) as part of their strategy to control the transmission of infection.Method: New functions were developed to facilitate the use of ODK, Enketo and R in large scale data collection, aggregation, monitoring, and near-real-time analysis during clinical research in health emergencies. We present enhancements to ODK that include a built-in audit-trail, a framework and companion app for biometric registration of ISO/IEC 19794-2 fingerprint templates, enhanced performance features, better scalability for studies featuring millions of data form submissions, increased options for parallelization of research projects, and pipelines for automated management and analysis of data. We also developed novel encryption protocols for enhanced web-form security in Enketo.Results: Against the backdrop of a complex and challenging epidemic response, our enhanced platform of open tools was used to collect and manage data from more than 280,000 eligible study participants who received VSV-Zebov-GP under informed consent. These data were used to determine whether the VSV-Zebov-GP was safe and effective and to guide daily field operations.Conclusions: We present open-source developments that make electronic data management during clinical research and health emergencies more viable and robust. These developments will also enhance and expand the functionality of a diverse range of data collection platforms that are based on the ODK software and standards.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Atinkut Alamirrew Zeleke ◽  
Tolga Naziyok ◽  
Fleur Fritz ◽  
Lara Christianson ◽  
Rainer Röhrig

BACKGROUND Population-level survey (PLS) is an essential standard method used in public health research. It supports to quantify sociodemographic events and support public health policy development and intervention designs with evidence. During survey, data collection mechanisms seem the most determinant to avoid mistakes before they happen. The use of electronic devices such as smartphones and tablet computers improve the quality and cost-effectiveness of public health surveys. However, there is a lack of systematically analyzed evidence to show the potential impact of electronic-based data collection tools on data quality and cost reduction in interviewer-administered surveys compared to the standard paper-based data collection system OBJECTIVE This systematic review aims to evaluate the impact of interviewer-administered electronic device data collection methods concerning data quality and cost reduction in PLS compared to the traditional paper-based methods. METHODS A systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, the Web of Science, EconLit and Cochrane CENTRAL, and CDSR to identify relevant studies from 2008 to 2018. We included randomized and non-randomized studies that examine data quality and cost reduction outcomes. Moreover, usability, user experience, and usage parameters from the same studies were included. Two independent authors screened the title, abstract, and finally extracted data from the included papers. A third author mediated in case of disagreement. The review authors used EndNote for de-duplication and Rayyan for screening RESULTS The search strategy from the electronic databases found 3,817 articles. After de-duplication, 2,533 articles were screened, and 14 articles fulfilled the inclusion criteria. None of the studies was designed as a randomized control trial. Most of the studies have a quasi-experimental design, like comparative experimental evaluation studies nested on the other ongoing cross-sectional surveys. 4 comparative evaluations, 2 pre-post intervention comparative evaluation, 2 retrospectives comparative evaluation, and 4 one arm non-comparative studies were included in our review. Meta-analysis was not possible because of the heterogeneity in study design, the type, and level of outcome measurements and the study settings. Individual article synthesis showed that data from electronic data collection systems possessed good quality data and delivered faster when compared to the paper-based data collection system. Only two studies linked the cost and data quality outcomes to describe the cost-effectiveness of electronic-based data collection systems. Despite the poor economic evaluation qualities, most of the reported results were in favor of EDC for the large-scale surveys. The field data collectors reported that an electronic data collection system was a feasible, acceptable and preferable tool for their work. Onsite data error prevention, fast data submission, and easy to handle devices were the comparative advantages of electronic data collection systems. Technical difficulties, accidental data loss, device theft, security concerns, power surges, and internet connection problems were reported as challenges during the implementation. CONCLUSIONS Though positive evidence existed about the comparative advantage of electronic data capture over paper-based tools, the included studies were not methodologically rigorous enough to combine. We need more rigorous studies that demonstrate the comparative evidence of paper and electronic-based data collection systems in public health surveys on data quality, work efficiency, and cost reduction CLINICALTRIAL The review protocol is registered in the International Prospective Register for Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) CRD42018092259. The protocol of this article was also pre-published (JMIR Res Protoc 2019;8(1): e10678 doi:10.2196/10678).


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Marks ◽  
Sham Lal ◽  
Hannah Brindle ◽  
Pierre-Stéphane Gsell ◽  
Matthew MacGregor ◽  
...  

Abstract BackgroundODK provides software and standards that are popular solutions for off-grid electronic data collection and are the basis of related products like CommCare, Enketo, Ona, SurveyCTO and KoBoToolbox. In combination with the use of statistical analysis software such as R, these tools provide fully open-source options for off-grid use in public health data collection, management, analysis and reporting.ResultsNew functions were developed to facilitate the use of ODK, Enketo and R in large scale data collection, aggregation, monitoring and near-real-time analysis during clinical research in health emergencies. We present open-source enhancements to ODK that include a built-in audit-trail, a framework and companion app for biometric registration of ISO/IEC 19794-2 fingerprint templates, enhanced performance features, better scalability for studies featuring millions of data form submissions, increased options for parallelisation of research projects, and pipelines for automated management and analysis of data. We also developed novel encryption protocols for enhanced web-form security in Enketo. During the 2018-2020 Ebola epidemic in the North Kivu & Ituri regions of Democratic Republic of Congo, ODK, Enketo and R were leveraged to support the DRC Ministère de la Santé RDC and World Health Organization in their efforts to administer an experimental vaccine (VSV-Zebov-GP) as part of their strategy to control the transmission of infection. Against the backdrop of a complex and challenging epidemic response, our enhanced platform of open tools was used to collect and manage data from more than 280,000 eligible study participants who received VSV under informed consent. These data were used to determine whether the VSV-Zebov-GP was safe and effective and to guide daily field operations.ConclusionsWe present open source developments that make electronic data management during clinical research and health emergencies more viable and robust. These developments will also enhance and expand the functionality of a diverse range of data collection platforms (Ona, KoBoToolbox etc.) that are based on the ODK software and standards.FundingThis research is funded by the Department of Health and Social Care using UK Aid funding and is managed by the NIHR (PR-OD-1017-20001).


To evaluate and improve the delivery of health care services and programs; to collect and share information on agro-biodiversity; to fill the gaps in the data of artisanal or industrial fisheries, the use of computer tools of data collection is a major asset. It is now obvious that most of these tools are difficult to use in developing countries. And this is because of the complexity of use, either because they are commercial solutions or simply because these tools require a stable internet connection. This study is the result of thorough research on Open Data Kit (ODK), a suite of tools fully compatible with the context of developing countries and fully open source software. This article traces the research work done for the design, implementation, and improvement of ODK. A description of the different ODK extensions that can be found in the literature is given in addition to the reasons that explain the success of ODK in developing countries. To highlight the utility of ODK, an analysis of the areas of use of ODK has been made. This analysis concludes that ODK is mainly used to improve the intervention effectiveness of health system agents in developing countries.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah A. O. Wamwenje ◽  
Ibrahim I. Wangwe ◽  
Nicodemus Masila ◽  
Caroline K. Mirieri ◽  
Lillian Wambua ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Rimawati Aulia Insani Sadarang ◽  
A Syamsiah Adha ◽  
Sukfitriyanti Syahrir ◽  
Abd. Majid HR.Lagu ◽  
Muh. Fajar Pahrir ◽  
...  

Perkembangan teknologi komunikasi dan informasi yang masif memberi tuntutan pelaksanaan penelitian yang lebih cepat, namun tetap efektif dan efisien.  Pengumpulan hingga analisis data merupakan rangkaian proses penelitian dengan alokasi waktu dan dana yang terbesar. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk memberikan alternatif pemanfaatan produk teknologi agar proses pengumpulan hingga analisis data dapat berlangsung efektif dan efisien. Pada penelitian ini, sistem Open Data Kit (ODK) dikembangkan sebagai media pengumpulan data. Penggunaan sistem ini dapat memberikan efisiensi pembiayaan pengadaan instrumen penelitian/ kuesioner kertas, dapat meniadakan proses penginputan, kompilasi dan pre-prosesing data sehingga proses analisis dapat berlangsung lebih cepat. Pemanfaatan sistem ODK akan sangat membantu pelaksanaan penelitian agar efektif dan efisien karena penggunaan yang sederhana, dapat dikembangkan sesuai dengan kebutuhan penelitian dan tidak membutuhkan keterampilan khusus untuk dapat mengoperasikannya The massive development of communication and information technology demands a faster, yet effective and efficient research implementation. Data collection to analysis is a series of research processes with the largest allocation of time and funds. This study aims to provide an alternative use of technology products so that the process of collecting and analyzing data can be effective and efficient. In this study, the Open Data Kit (ODK) system was developed as a data collection medium. The use of this system can provide cost efficiency in the procurement of research instruments / paper questionnaires, can eliminate the process of inputting, compiling and pre-processing data so that the analysis process can take place more quickly. The use of the ODK system will greatly assist the implementation of research to be effective and efficient because of its simple use, it can be developed according to research needs and does not require special skills to be able to operate it.


2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 1185-1189 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Sharif ◽  
RM Lundin ◽  
P Morgan ◽  
JE Hall ◽  
A Dhadda ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective To develop a secure, efficient, and easy-to-use data collection platform to measure the prevalence of sepsis in Wales over 24 hours. Materials and Methods Open Data Kit was used on Android devices with Google App Engine and a digital data collection form. Results A total of 184 students participated in the study using 59 devices across 16 hospitals, 1198 datasets were submitted, and 97% of participants found the Open Data Kit form easy to use. Discussion We successfully demonstrated that by combining a reliable Android device, a free open-source data collection framework, a scalable cloud-based server, and a team of 184 medical students, we can deliver a low-cost, highly reliable platform that requires little training or maintenance, providing results immediately on completion of data collection. Conclusion Our platform allowed us to measure, for the first time, the prevalence of sepsis in Wales over 24 hours.


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