Global Health Press
Fingerprints to track child vaccination histories in developing countries

Fingerprints to track child vaccination histories in developing countries

Multispectral imaging fingerprint sensors are to be used as part of a tracking solution to stop vaccine waste for millions of Africans not yet vaccinated.

Until now, vaccine delivery has been hampered by ineffective tracking and reporting and consequently millions of young children are not being vaccinated. An estimated 2.5 million born this year will die before the age of 5

Lumidigm’s fingerprint sensors will be used in a solution created by Fulcrum Biometrics.

The delivery model in many parts of Africa depends on a multitude of healthcare workers who serve very large and remote areas. When there are no vaccination records to consult, many patients are re-immunized unnecessarily, others are simply missed and a finite supply of vaccine is wasted.

Unfortunately, without a proper and reliable means of identification, vaccine wastage rates are higher than 50 percent in some of the most challenging geographies. Fulcrum’s solution aims to solve this problem with a biometric vaccination registry that is operated and managed in the field with low-cost mobile devices.

Adult and child patients are identified in the registry with fingerprint sensors from Lumidigm. Returning patients can pull up their vaccination records with the touch of a finger allowing the healthcare worker to deliver appropriate care.

“With our VaxTrac system leveraging Lumidigm fingerprint sensors, we have been able to improve immunization tracking which allows us to reduce waste so that we can vaccinate more people and save lives,” asserts Mark Thomas, executive director of VaxTrac, a non-profit organization supported by The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, among others.

“We started evaluating Lumidigm sensors in 2012. Since the skin of children, especially young children, can be very malleable, we knew from experience that conventional biometric technologies that need a finger pressed against the device do not work. The ability that Lumidigm offers to pull fingerprint images from deeper layers produces images less susceptible to distortion and allows us to track vaccinations accurately.”

“Being able to quickly read every patient’s fingerprints, no matter how problematic, in all types of conditions, from extremely dry to wet, is vital to this program,” emphasizes Bill Spence, Lumidigm Vice President of Sales-North American, Europe and Australia. “Biometric authentication has reduced the waste of vaccine dramatically, helping so many more people get vaccinated.”

The biometric vaccine registry also enables real-time reporting for streamlined supply-chain management, further reducing waste.

The first in-country deployment of the Lumidigm fingerprint sensors was in March, 2013. The units are now in Kenya, Uganda and Benin with the largest deployment in 40 clinics throughout Zambia.

Community healthcare workers are trained to use the biometric vaccine delivery system. The simple, user-friendly system was especially developed for workers with limited literacy. With the biometric VaxTrac system, expensive, specialized training is not necessary for vaccine delivery in remote areas.

“My favorite part is to see the shock on healthcare workers’ faces after their first scan of another person’s fingerprint,” Thomas adds. “The patient is identified instantly and all their vaccination information is available on the computer screen in an intuitive graphic interface. Workers know immediately what vaccines to administer and which doses are not needed and may be reserved for other citizens.”

Source: planet biometrics