Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Withdrawn
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04915885 |
Other study ID # |
FPC21 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Withdrawn |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 2022 |
Est. completion date |
December 2025 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2024 |
Source |
University of Geneva, Switzerland |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
High-quality contraceptive counseling can strengthen global efforts to reduce the unmet need
for and suboptimal use of modern contraceptives. This study aims to identify a package of
contraceptive counseling interventions designed to strengthen existing contraceptive services
and determine its effectiveness in increasing clients' level of decision-making autonomy and
meeting their contraceptive needs.
Description:
Methods The five-phase complex intervention design starts with a pre-formative phase aimed at
mapping potential study sites to establish the sampling frame. The two-part formative phase
first uses participatory approaches to identify the perspectives of clients, including young
people and providers, to ensure research contextualization and address each interest group's
needs and priorities; clinical observations of client-provider encounters to document routine
care form the second part. The design workshop of the third phase will result in the
development of a package of contraceptive counseling interventions. In the fourth and
experimental phase, a multi-intervention, three-arm, single-blinded, parallel cluster
randomized-controlled trial will compare routine care (arm 1) with the contraceptive
counseling package (arm 2) and the same package combined with wider method availability (arm
3). The fifth and reflective phase aims to analyze the package's cost-effectiveness and
identify implementation barriers and enablers. The primary outcomes are clients' level of
decision-making autonomy and met need for modern contraceptives.
Discussion Applying participatory action research principles in designing, testing, and
scaling up effective, affordable, and sustainable counseling interventions could help
optimize clients' decision-making autonomy and meet their needs for modern contraceptives in
low-resource settings. Recognizing the socio-cultural and health service complexities
surrounding contraception, including client-provider power dynamics, the study assumes that
engaging key stakeholders, including adolescents, women, men, service providers, and
policymakers would be more effective. A set of low-technology interventions will likely
affect, at the individual level and in a sustainable way, the knowledge, attitudes, and
behaviors of women and couples toward contraceptive counseling and provision. At the health
service delivery level, the trial implementation would necessitate a shift in providers'
attitudes and accountability toward a systematic integration into their clinical practice of
must-have and person-centered counseling components, as well as improved health service
organization to ensure the availability of competent staff and diversity of contraceptive
choices.