A Comparison of Respiratory Sample Collection by a Parent or by a Healthcare Worker (ReSPeCT)
Respiratory Tract Infections
About this trial
This is an interventional diagnostic trial for Respiratory Tract Infections focused on measuring Respiratory tract infections, Viral infections, Pediatrics, Specimen collection
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- healthy children, 0 to 23 months of age at enrolment (not reached their 2nd birthday)
- born between 36 and 42 weeks gestational age
- written informed consent from parent/guardian (available for telephone contact)
- parent willing to collect an anterior nasal specimen from the study child when meets criteria for ARI of interest
Exclusion Criteria:
- children with chronic pulmonary or cardiovascular disorders (including diagnosed asthma, or frequent use of asthma medication)
- children with chronic metabolic disorders (such as but not limited to diabetes mellitis, renal dysfunction, haemoglobinopathies)
- children with immune system disorders (such as HIV/AIDS or receiving immune system suppressing medications)
- children with other chronic illnesses whose enrolment is deemed by the investigators to make it inappropriate to enrol them onto the study
- parent or guardian with sufficient English language skills to complete study diaries and perform study tasks as required
Sites / Locations
- Queensland Children's Medical Research Institute
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
Experimental
Healthcare worker visit
Parent collection
Healthcare worker performs home visit when study child has acute respiratory illness to collect a respiratory swab (nasopharyngeal swab). At the healthcare worker home visit, the HCW will collect the nasopharyngeal swab, and a parent will collect an anterior nasal swab. The HCW swab is to be returned immediately to the laboratory, and the parent collected swab was placed in a post box for return to the laboratory by surface mail.
Home collection of respiratory swab (anterior nose) and mailed return when study subject has an acute respiratory illness.