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Perinatal Death clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05640063 Recruiting - Perinatal Death Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Enhanced Delivery and Newborn Kit

Start date: March 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The evidence is required to assess the effectiveness of enhanced delivery and newborn kits as compared to standard delivery kits in the flood affected districts that can increase the utilization of services and reduce the delays that are responsible for poor maternal and newborn health through LHW program.

NCT ID: NCT05640050 Enrolling by invitation - Stillbirth Clinical Trials

Integrated Community Engagement and Audit Systems

Start date: January 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this implementation research project is to determine the feasibility of establishing and implementing an acceptable and robust audit system with community representation at secondary health facilities to improve maternal and perinatal outcomes. The implementation phases follow the standard World Health Organization (WHO) audit system. The initial step includes identifying death cases for review and subsequently collecting the detailed information on the near miss and adverse event history. A mixed methods data analysis will include both quantitative components, such as identification of trends in rates and causes of death and geographic location, and qualitative components, such as analysis of modifiable factors. The use of both types of data will provide a robust analysis of the problems and aid the audit team iin identifying and supporting priorities for action. The three-delay's model categorize the modifiable factors as the first delay (recognition of danger sign and care-seeking decision), second delay (identification and reaching health facility) and third delays (receiving adequate care and treatment at facilities). The audit team will make recommendations in collaboration with community representatives. The findings of the audits will be shared with the health facility authorities, program managers and community representatives to support policy and practice changes. A monthly monitoring cycle will be set up within the implementing facilities to ensure effective implementation of the audit systems.

NCT ID: NCT05612984 Withdrawn - Preterm Labor Clinical Trials

Calcium Aspirin Multiple Micronutrients (CAMMS) to Reduce Preterm Birth

CAMMS
Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This trial will evaluate the impact of an integrated intervention of daily maternal calcium, aspirin, and multiple micronutrients (CAMMS) compared to iron-folic acid (IFA) during pregnancy on preterm birth and other adverse birth outcomes. Both interventions will be delivered through existing antenatal service platforms using context-specific strategies informed by formative research incorporating human-centered design processes to achieve high acceptability and high adherence, in three low-income countries with diverse contexts: Burkina Faso, Pakistan, and Zimbabwe.

NCT ID: NCT05369806 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Leveraging Interactive Text Messaging to Monitor and Support Maternal Health in Kenya

AI-NEO
Start date: May 4, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Mobile health (mHealth) interventions such as interactive short message service (SMS) text messaging with healthcare workers (HCWs) have been proposed as efficient, accessible additions to traditional health care in resource-limited settings. Realizing the full public health potential of mHealth for maternal health requires use of new technological tools that dynamically adapt to user needs. This study will test use of a natural language processing computer algorithm on incoming SMS messages with pregnant people and new mothers in Kenya to see if it can help to identify urgent messages.

NCT ID: NCT05226949 Completed - Neonatal Sepsis Clinical Trials

Host RNA Expression Profiles and Protein Biomarkers in Neonatal Herpes Simplex Virus Infection

Start date: January 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study seeks to identify and test host RNA expression profiles in context to protein biomarkers in dried blood spot samples as novel diagnostic markers of neonatal herpes simplex virus infection and to improve the understanding of the pathogenesis of the disease.

NCT ID: NCT05223140 Not yet recruiting - Perinatal Death Clinical Trials

Optimal Time Intervals for Vaginal Breech Births: A Multi-Site Case-Control Study

Start date: February 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study uses a case-control design to test the hypotheses that avoidable delay in late second stage and premature cord clamping are associated with admission to the neonatal unit and/or early perinatal death following vaginal breech births. We aim to determine the predictive value of: 1) adherence/non-adherence to the Physiological Breech Birth Algorithm; and 2) premature cord clamping (<1 minute following birth) for admission to the neonatal unit and/or perinatal death following vaginal breech births. The secondary objectives are to: 1) test all variables for a single-factor association with the primary outcome; and 2) test the predictive values of associated variables using linear regression; in order to 3) explore other factors contributing to adverse outcomes in vaginal breech births.

NCT ID: NCT05187897 Recruiting - Neonatal Death Clinical Trials

CHV-NEO: Community-based Digital Communication to Support Neonatal Health

Start date: January 10, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Neonatal mortality (defined as death in the first 28 days of life) remains unacceptably high in sub-Sarahan Africa. The concentrated risk of neonatal illness in the first weeks of life and its potential to rapidly deteriorate means that expanding mothers' access to timely information and support during this period is critical to reducing neonatal mortality. This cluster-randomized control trial aims to integrate a 2 way interactive SMS text messaging intervention into existing digital infrastructure supporting Community Health Volunteer (CHV) workflow in Western Kenya (dCHT) to enable remote communication by mothers with CHVs between home visits.

NCT ID: NCT05127070 Recruiting - Prematurity Clinical Trials

Evaluating the NeoTree in Malawi and Zimbabwe

Start date: October 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Neonatal mortality remains unacceptably high. Globally, the majority of mothers now deliver in health facilities in low resource settings where quality of newborn care is poor. Health systems strengthening through digitial quality improvement systems, such as the Neotree, are a potential solution. The overarching aim of this study is to complete the co-development of NeoTree-gamma with key functionalities configured, operationalised, tested and ready for large scale roll out across low resource settings. Specific study objectives are as follows: 1. To further develop and test the NeoTree at tertiary facilities in Malawi and Zimbabwe 2. To investigate HCPs and parent/carer view of the NeoTree, including how acceptable and usable HCWs find the app, and potential barriers and enablers to implementing/using it in practice. 3. To collect outcome data for newborns from representative sites where NeoTree is not implemented. 4. To test the clinical validity of key NeoTree diagnostic algorithms, e.g. neonatal sepsis and hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE) against gold standard or best available standard diagnoses. 5. To add dashboards and data linkage to the functionality of the NeoTree 6. To develop and test proof of concept for communicating daily electronic medical records (EMR) using NeoTree 7. To initiate a multi-country network of newborn health care workers, policy makers and academics. 8. To estimate cost of implementing NeoTree at all sites and potential costs at scale

NCT ID: NCT04766866 Recruiting - Preeclampsia Clinical Trials

sFlt1/PlGF and Planned Delivery to Prevent Preeclampsia at Term.

PE37
Start date: March 2, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

- Preeclampsia (PE) affects ~5% of pregnancies. Although improved obstetrical care has significantly diminished associated maternal mortality, PE remains a leading cause of maternal morbidity and mortality in the world. - Term PE accounts for 70% of all PE and a large proportion of maternal-fetal morbidity related with this condition. Prediction and prevention of term PE remains unsolved. - Previously proposed approaches are based on combined screening and/or prophylactic drugs, but these policies are unlikely to be implementable in many world settings. - Recent evidence shows that sFlt1-PlGF ratio at 35-37w predicts term PE with 80% detection rate. - Likewise, recent studies demonstrate that induction of labor (IOL) from 37w is safe. - The investigators hypothesize that a single-step universal screening for term PE based on sFlt1/PlGF ratio at 35-37w followed by IOL from 37w would reduce the prevalence of term PE without increasing cesarean section rates or adverse neonatal outcomes. - The investigators propose a randomized clinical trial to evaluate the impact of a screening of term PE with sFlt-1/PlGF ratio in asymptomatic nulliparous women at 35-37w. Women will be assigned to revealed (sFlt-1/PlGF known to clinicians) versus concealed (unknown) arms. A cutoff of >90th centile will be used to define high risk of PE and offer IOL from 37w. - If successful, the results of this trial will provide evidence to support a simple universal screening strategy reducing the prevalence of term PE, which could be applicable in most healthcare settings and have enormous implications on perinatal outcomes and public health policies worldwide.

NCT ID: NCT04663620 Completed - Perinatal Mortality Clinical Trials

Saving Babies Lives

SBL
Start date: January 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The central hypothesis of this study is that a neonatal healthcare programme that has a significant impact on neonatal mortality and which spans the healthcare journey from village to referral hospital can be developed and implemented in a low-resource rural setting. This study is a five-year cluster-randomised trial, covering a rural and isolated province in North-Eastern Cambodia. The intervention of this study is the Saving Babies' Lives programme, which is a comprehensive, contextual and iterative neonatal healthcare package. The Saving Babies' Lives programme comprises a training programme for primary care facilities, and participatory action research with community health workers (known in Cambodia as village health support group volunteers). The control is no intervention; standard government service continues. Qualitative and quantitative data collection supports improvements in the iterative programme, and evaluation of the study, with the intention of creating a scalable blueprint. Wellcome Trust grant number 220211.