In order to safely and effectively reopen businesses and universities across the US, institutions will need to develop approaches to rapidly identify COVID-19 cases and manage their spread while balancing program effectiveness, feasibility, costs, and scalability. The investigators will evaluate the implementation of a COVID-19 screening program that coordinates several existing systems at the University of Pennsylvania including saliva-based viral testing and test different outreach strategies (opt-in vs opt-out) to improve program enrollment.
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has resulted in close to 10,000,000 reported cases worldwide, including more than 2,000,000 aggregated reported cases and 120,000 deaths in the United States. Initial efforts to address the COVID-19 pandemic were aimed at testing symptomatic individuals, implementing stay-in-place orders, and at increasing hospital capacity to meet surge demands. While the US continues to confront the current crisis, we must plan for the future by putting in place tools to enhance our ability to conduct effective screening, containment, and case management. Widespread COVID-19 testing is needed to safely and effectively reopen schools and businesses across the US. However, currently approved testing options require reagents that are limited in supply, severely hindering scalability. Emerging evidence indicates that saliva testing with the option of at-home sample collection can accurately identify COVID-19 viral infection. Additional diagnostic testing options will continue to increase patient access. Moreover, this approach provides an option for the easy, safe and convenient collection of samples required for testing without traveling to a doctor's office, hospital, or testing site. Collection by the patient also reduces exposure of health care workers to the virus and preserves limited personal protective equipment. With access to expanded testing, health systems and universities will need to test alternative methods to manage COVID-19 spread while balancing program effectiveness, feasibility, costs, and scalability. Insights from the field of behavioral economics offer promise for designing and sustaining these kinds of policies. Specifically, research has demonstrated that an opt-out framed recruitment strategy compared to a conventional opt-in strategy can improve enrollment and adherence to behavioral interventions. For these reasons, the investigators propose to evaluate the implementation of a COVID-19 screening program that uses saliva-based testing and to test approaches to improve program enrollment.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SCREENING
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
412
Behaviorally informed, opt-out framed recruitment email
Standard, opt-in framed recruitment email
Penn Medicine
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Proportion Enrolled
The proportion of those invited that enroll in the study
Time frame: 4 weeks
Participant Age
The average age of participants enrolled in the study
Time frame: 4 weeks
Participant Sex
The proportion of females enrolled in the study
Time frame: 4 weeks
Participant Race/Ethnicity
The proportion of enrolled participants belonging to specified categories of race (e.g., Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, White or Caucasian) and ethnicity (i.e., Hispanic or Latino, Non-Hispanic or Latino)
Time frame: 4 weeks
Participant Income
The proportion of enrolled participants belonging to specified categories of income (e.g., Less than $10000, $10000 to $19999, $20000 to $29999, $150000 or more)
Time frame: 4 weeks
Participant Education
The proportion of enrolled participants belonging to specified categories of education (e.g., less than high school, some high school, high school grad, college: 4 year degree, post-college education)
Time frame: 4 weeks
Test Completion
The proportion of enrolled participants that submit a saliva sample
Time frame: 8 weeks
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