You can download the CommCare Evidence Base from Dimagi's here.
CommCare Evidence Base
Dimagi maintains the CommCare Evidence Base and adds new studies as they are discovered. This resource lives as an online, up-to-date repository, with new studies being shared and published frequently. This can be accessed here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/160io42Nalm7hDbDULHSxEoSyiVMEZdWL9ZghPApC1aQ/edit#gid=0
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/160io42Nalm7hDbDULHSxEoSyiVMEZdWL9ZghPApC1aQ/edit#gid=0CommCare Evidence Base: Summary
In addition to the online repository, a summary of key highlights can be found here: https://www.dimagi.com/toolkits/commcare-evidence-base/
Featured Studies
Within the CommCare Evidence Base, two RCTs -- one in India and one in Tanzania -- demonstrate that clients of community health workers using CommCare have better behaviors and outcomes than the clients of community health workers who don’t use CommCare.
A 2015 Mathematica RCT found improved client behaviors among clients of FLWs using CommCare, including a 73% increase in ANC Visits, 58% increase in consumption of iron tablets, and a 36% increase in the use of contraception (Borkhum, 2015).
An RCT in Tanzania documented a 74% institutional delivery rate for clients whose FLWs use CommCare, compared to a 63% institutional delivery rate in the control group (Hackett 2018).
Over 10 years, scaling CommCare in Uttar Pradesh averted 149,468 neonatal deaths - or a 5.3% total reduction of neonatal deaths (Prinja 2018).
A 2017 study in India found that CommCare is more cost-effective than cholera and typhoid vaccines (Prinja, 2017).
A cardiovascular diseases training for CHWs that took 12 hours with paper took 3 hours with CommCare (Surka, 2014).