Implementing an Integrated RMNCH Intervention by Community Health Workers in Achham and Dolakha: National Pilot
Study Details
Study Description
Brief Summary
The investigators will conduct a cluster-controlled, stepped wedge implementation science trial of a bundled reproductive, maternal, neonatal, and child healthcare (RMNCH) delivery intervention within an approximate population of 300,000 people in rural Nepal. This intervention integrates five evidence-based approaches for reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health focused on the "golden 1000 days" from conception through age two: 1) Community Health Worker model of home-based care to monitor and increase utilization of services, maternal and neonatal health knowledge, self-efficacy, social support, and emergency planning among mothers; 2) Continuous surveillance of all pregnancies and children via an integrated electronic medical record; 3) Delivering community-based integrated management of newborn and childhood illness (CB-IMNCI) via CHWs; 4) Group antenatal and postnatal care to improve care delivery and reduce mortality during the "golden 1000 days" from conception to age two; and 5) Balanced counseling to increase post-partum contraception.
Condition or Disease | Intervention/Treatment | Phase |
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N/A |
Study Design
Arms and Interventions
Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
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Experimental: Bundled RMNCH Intervention Stepped wedge, cluster-controlled implementation science trial of 5 bundled intervention components (1. Community Health Worker, 2, Continuous Surveillance, 3. CB-Integrated Management of Newborn and Childhood Illness, 4. Group Antenatal and Postnatal Care, and 5. Balanced Post-Partum Contraceptive Counseling) implemented across 40 village clusters in Achham District, Nepal and 40 village clusters in Dolakha District, Nepal (covering a total population of approximately 300,000) in coordination with district authorities and study staff. The investigators anticipate the experimental arm will enroll approximately 12,000 women and their children over the 18mo enrollment period. |
Other: Community Health Worker
The intervention is designed to address these primary drivers of underutilization of reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health services in rural Nepal, namely: poverty, lack of social support, and poor birth planning. The investigators have worked with a cadre of Community Healthcare Workers who, in addition to the responsibilities of local community health volunteers, have added responsibilities, training, and managerial support. These women support their community members in their homes to identify and overcome social barriers and plan for emergency healthcare needs. The goals are to increase utilization of services, maternal and neonatal health knowledge, self-efficacy, social support, and emergency planning among mothers
Other: Continuous Surveillance
Each patient identified by a Community Health Worker will undergo a complete diagnostic evaluation by the hospital-based clinicians and will be enrolled in the study only if they are identified as currently pregnant, have recently given birth, or have a child under the age of 24 months. Continuous surveillance systems ensure that the entire population is surveyed every three months and has a three month touchpoint with a Community Health Worker.
Other: CB-Integrated Management of Newborn and Childhood Illness
Safe delivery care; effective neonatal resuscitation; management of childhood diarrhea, malnutrition, and pneumonia; and treatment of traumatic and congenital surgical conditions can reduce child mortality. Community Based Integrated Management of Newborn and Child Illness (CB-IMNCI) has shown substantial reductions in neonatal and early child mortality. Community Health Workers will use CB-IMNCI as the clinical protocol for ongoing care to the community.
Other: Group Antenatal and Postnatal Care
The proposed model will change antenatal and pediatric care in three major ways: 1) conduct care in a group setting, 2) provide expert and facilitated peer counseling, and 3) incorporate emergency planning. The group setting is designed to create a supportive social network among women facing similar challenges. The opportunity for counseling beyond the current standard will promote detailed emergency planning and the sharing of context-specific advice from peers to overcome barriers to access care. This intervention draws on the strength within communities of women to change health-seeking behaviors.
Other: Balanced Post-Partum Contraceptive Counseling
Research on interventions to improve postpartum contraception suggest strategies that bridge the continuum of reproductive health care-antenatal care, labor and delivery, postnatal care, and infant care-are more effective than short term, stand-alone counseling sessions. The structured counseling module incorporated in the intervention will be partially adapted from the Balanced Counseling Strategy, an interactive contraceptive counseling method developed by the Population Council in accordance with the World Health Organization's tiered effectiveness guidelines. Prior studies in clinical settings in Nepal have demonstrated increased uptake of modern contraceptive methods, especially of long-acting reversible contraceptives with use of balanced counseling.
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Outcome Measures
Primary Outcome Measures
- Institutional Birth Rate [3 years]
The percentage of births in a healthcare facility with a healthcare professional present.
- Under-Two Mortality Rate [3 years]
The under-2 mortality rate is the probability (expressed as a rate per 1,000 live births) of a child born in a specified year dying before reaching the age of two if subject to current age-specific mortality rates.
- Post-Partum Contraceptive Prevalence Rate [3 years]
The post-partum contraceptive prevalence rate is number of married reproductive aged women (15-49) in the study population who delivered in the past two years who are using a modern contraceptive method out of the total number of married reproductive aged women (15-49) in the study population who delivered in the past two years.
Secondary Outcome Measures
- Home Visit Coverage [3 months]
The percentage of children under 2 receiving monthly home based care by a CHW out of total number of children under 2 (aggregated by the percentage of pregnant women and reproductive-aged women).
- Group Care Content Fidelity [3 months]
The percentage of topics covered and completed out of total planned topics
- Group Participation [3 months]
The percentage of participants completing group sessions out of total scheduled participants
- Session Completion [3 months]
The percentage of group sessions completed out of total appropriate number of group sessions
- First-Trimester Pregnancies Identified [3 months]
The percentage of pregnancies identified at less than 12 weeks
- Antenatal Care Completion [3 months]
The percentage of women who have had 4 or more antenatal care visits and are eligible for the government financial incentive out of total number of women delivered
- Pediatric Pneumonia Incidence [1 month]
The number of new cases of pneumonia in catchment area in children under age of two/month
- Pediatric Diarrhea Incidence [1 month]
The number of new cases of diarrhea in catchment area in children under age of two/month
- Pediatric Stunting Prevalence [1 month]
The number of cases children in catchment area under age of two whose length-for height or height-for-age is two SDs below WHO Child Growth Standards median/total number of children in catchment area under age of two
- Exclusive Breastfeeding Prevalence [1 month]
The number of infants in catchment area age zero-five months who are exclusively breastfed/total infants in catchment area age zero-five months
- Percent of postpartum women with unmet need for contraception [3 years]
The number of reproductive age women within the first year following the birth of their most recent child who desire to either stop or postpone childbearing for the next 2 years who are not currently using a contraceptive method or have a repeat unintended pregnancy while not using contraception/Total number of women who are up to one year postpartum, excluding women who declare that they are infecund, have had a hysterectomy, or are in menopause
- Contraceptive Method Mix [3 months]
The percentage of women using each method of modern contraception out of total number of women using modern contraception
- Total Intervention Cost [3 years]
The total sum costs of each intervention component
- Cost-Effectiveness of Bundled Intervention [3 years]
The total sum costs of each intervention component over under-2 deaths averted by intervention
Eligibility Criteria
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
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Reproductive aged women 15-49;
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Reproductive aged women 15-49; recently delivered in past two years;
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Reproductive aged women 15-49; active pregnancy during study period and identified by a CHW serving their village
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Children aged 0-2; children of recently-delivered mothers (population #2 or #3 above);
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Healthcare staff; CHWs serving village clusters, CHW Leaders serving one of the village clusters, Nyaya Health Nepal and Government of Nepal employees involved in study design, program implementation, data collection, or data analysis processes; and
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Must reside in either Achham or Dolakha District, Nepal.
Exclusion Criteria:
Patients meeting inclusion criteria and consenting to study enrollment, as stated above, will be included in the study unless 1) patients migrate from the study are before completion of any of the bundled interventions; 2) patients request exclusion from the study at any point during the bundled intervention.
Contacts and Locations
Locations
Site | City | State | Country | Postal Code | |
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1 | Bayalpata Hospital | Sanfebagar | Achham | Nepal | |
2 | Charikot Primary Health Center | Bhimeshwor | Dolakha | Nepal |
Sponsors and Collaborators
- Possible
- United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
- National Institutes of Health (NIH)
- Ministry of Health and Population, Nepal
- Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Sheela Maru, MD, MPH, Possible
- Principal Investigator: Pushpa Chaudhari, MD, Ministry of Health and Population, Nepal
Study Documents (Full-Text)
None provided.More Information
Publications
None provided.- RMNCHnyaya
- 1DP5OD019894-01
- AID-OAA-A-11-0001