Author:
Lim Esther,Mehrotra Megha L.,Lamba Katherine,Kamali Amanda,Lai Kristina W.,Meza Erika,Bertsch-Merbach Stephanie,Szeto Irvin,Ley Catherine,Martin Andrew B.,Parsonnet Julie,Robinson Peter,Gebhart David,Fonseca Noemi,Tsai Cheng-ting,Seftel David,Nicolici Allyx,Melton David,Jain Seema
Abstract
Abstract
Background
To describe the methodology for conducting the CalScope study, a remote, population-based survey launched by the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) to estimate SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence and understand COVID-19 disease burden in California.
Methods
Between April 2021 and August 2022, 666,857 randomly selected households were invited by mail to complete an online survey and at-home test kit for up to one adult and one child. A gift card was given for each completed survey and test kit. Multiple customized REDCap databases were used to create a data system which provided task automation and scalable data management through API integrations. Support infrastructure was developed to manage follow-up for participant questions and a communications plan was used for outreach through local partners.
Results
Across 3 waves, 32,671 out of 666,857 (4.9%) households registered, 6.3% by phone using an interactive voice response (IVR) system and 95.7% in English. Overall, 25,488 (78.0%) households completed surveys, while 23,396 (71.6%) households returned blood samples for testing. Support requests (n = 5,807) received through the web-based form (36.3%), by email (34.1%), and voicemail (29.7%) were mostly concerned with the test kit (31.6%), test result (26.8%), and gift card (21.3%).
Conclusions
Ensuring a well-integrated and scalable data system, responsive support infrastructure for participant follow-up, and appropriate academic and local health department partnerships for study management and communication allowed for successful rollout of a large population-based survey. Remote data collection utilizing online surveys and at-home test kits can complement routine surveillance data for a state health department.
Funder
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
State of California
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC