Invite-Only  ·  Virtual Workshop

From RCT to Real-World Impact:
How Demand-Side Interventions Help Close the Immunization Gap

Millions of children miss routine vaccinations not because vaccines are unavailable, but because caregivers lack awareness, timely reminders, or motivation to attend. Join Nobel Laureate Esther Duflo, Professor Arun Chandrasekhar, and teams from J-PAL and Evidence Action for an intimate session walking through the evidence base and the work now underway to translate these findings into a pilot in Nigeria.

Thursday, May 21, 2026
12:30–2:00 PM ET  ·  90-minute session with live Q&A
Virtual  ·  Zoom link provided upon registration
About the Workshop

The science of reaching every child

A landmark randomized controlled trial in Haryana, India — recently published in Econometrica — studied 75 combinations of interventions across 295,000 children and found that combining demand-generation interventions drives greater immunization uptake than any single approach. The most cost-effective package, a combination of text reminders and community ambassadors, increased full immunizations by 26% compared to the counterfactual. Leveraging ambassadors and social networks makes this approach significantly more cost-effective than intensive community engagement models. Adding layered incentives in low-coverage areas increased full immunization rates by 44%, and by 500% among villages in the lowest quintile of vaccination at baseline.

This workshop brings together the researchers who produced these findings and the team now adapting them for implementation in Nigeria, where UNICEF survey data shows that more than half of missed vaccinations stem from awareness gaps and competing priorities. It is a rare opportunity to ask direct questions of Nobel Laureate Esther Duflo and Arun Chandrasekhar — the researchers who designed and tested this intervention — and to engage with the team translating these findings into practice.

Presenters
Abdul Latif Jameel Professor of Poverty Alleviation and Development Economics at MIT. Co-founder and Co-director of J-PAL. Her research on immunization incentives in Rajasthan and the large-scale Haryana study that underpins this workshop has fundamentally shaped how the field thinks about demand-side health interventions. Co-author of Poor Economics and Good Economics for Hard Times.
2019 Nobel Laureate in Economics
Professor of Economics at Stanford. A leading researcher on social and economic networks, he studies how information diffuses through communities in developing countries and the science behind the community ambassador component. Co-author of the Haryana immunization study and a J-PAL affiliate.
2024 Infosys Prize in Economics
J-PAL's policy team will present on their broader prioritization of immunization demand generation and the partners they are supporting to bring this evidence to scale. J-PAL's mission is to reduce poverty by ensuring that policy is informed by scientific evidence, and they have supported the scale-up of programs reaching over 600 million people worldwide.
Workshop Host
Evidence Action's team will walk through the process of operationalizing the Haryana research into a pilot in two Nigerian states. You'll hear about the adaptation challenges, government partnership model, and learning goals that define what it means to translate an RCT into a real-world program.
Implementing Partner
Workshop Agenda

90 minutes in two parts

Part 1 The Research
Esther Duflo & Arun Chandrasekhar · 12:30–1:30 PM
12:30-1:30
The researchers will walk through their studies, dive deep into the ambassador model, and answer audience questions.
Part 2 From Evidence to Practice
J-PAL & Evidence Action · 1:30–2:00 PM
1:30-2:00
J-PAL will discuss the broader landscape of demand-side immunization work and how they're bringing this evidence to scale. Evidence Action will share how they're operationalizing this research in their pilot in Nigeria. And both organizations will answer audience questions

Reserve your spot

Space is limited for this invite-only workshop. Please RSVP to help us plan accordingly.

A calendar invite will be sent to you automatically once you RSVP.