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Clinical Trial Summary

Pregnancy increases the risk of malaria and nutritional deficiency. Despite some progress in ANC access over the past years, coverage of antenatal iron and folic acid supplementation (AIFAS) and intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp) remains low in many countries. The main objective of this research project is to identify the most effective ways to increase AIFAS and IPTp in low-income settings. We will assess the relative effectiveness of two strategies: the provision of information on the importance of AIFAS and IPTp for pregnant women (Intervention Arm I - demand side intervention), and the direct delivering of supplements and malaria drugs to women's homes (Intervention Arm 2 - supply side intervention). The two strategies will be tested through a small-randomized experiment with 720 pregnant women in the Taabo Health and Demographic Surveillance Site located in South-central Côte d'Ivoire. The primary outcome variable for the pilot study will be post-partum anemia and malaria infections. Secondary outcomes will be AIFAS and IPTp coverage as well as miscarriages, stillbirths and low birth weight deliveries as adverse birth outcomes.


Clinical Trial Description

Background Despite major progress in antennal care (ANC) access over the past years, coverage of essential antenatal interventions remains limited in many low- and middle-income countries. At the same time, rates of maternal anemia and exposure to malaria in pregnancy remain high. In Côte d'Ivoire, 59% of pregnant women are estimated to be anemic (Hb< 110g/L), and only a minority of women receive antenatal iron supplementation consistently throughout their pregnancy and less than one third of women received intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp). Both interventions have been shown to be highly effective for reducing the risk of stillbirth, prematurity and low birth weight, and have been highlighted as essential for reducing the burden of malnutrition in the 2013 Lancet series. Low coverage rates of essential ANC interventions have been attributed to lacking demand from beneficiaries (e.g. low ANC attendance), weak early health system contact with women, limited funding, stock outages and ineffective management of supplies.

In general, limited coverage of essential health services as well as limited adherence to national protocol have been attributed to multiple challenges in the health system. These challenges include the lack of knowledge on importance of medication, interrupted supply and stock outs, high cost of care, lack of availability of services, and demand-side barriers such as distance, education, opportunity cost, and cultural and social barriers. To address these challenges successfully, a large number of community-based studies assessed a range of interventions including community-based distribution of drugs, vaccines, or other public health services. In 2018, a systematic review of strategies identified 28 studies evaluating the treatment coverage in community-based public health programs. These studies covered a range of different strategies, including community-based treatment, distributor incentives, distribution along kinship networks, intensified information, education, and communication activities, fixed-point delivery, conversion from school- to community-based delivery, and management by a non-governmental organization. Services delivered included community-based public child health programs such as vitamin A supplementation, child immunizations, and mass drug administration campaigns targeting neglected tropical diseases. The largest positive influence on treatment coverage was found for 4 strategies: community-directed distribution, incentives to increase distributor motivation, distribution along kinship networks and implementation of intensified IEC activities. A 2016 Cochrane review evaluated the effectiveness of community-based health education and household monetary incentives in child immunization coverage in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Overall, health education at village meetings or at home, as well as household monetary incentives had only moderate-certainty evidence and little or no effect respectively on full immunization coverage. Vouchers have been widely used also to promote maternal and newborn health in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review consolidated evidence from seven published systematic reviews on the effects of different types of cash transfers and vouchers on the use and quality of maternity care services. Positive findings were found, indicating that reproductive health voucher programs increased utilization of reproductive health services, improved quality of care, and improved population health outcomes. In another Cochrane review focusing directly on antenatal care, 34 randomized controlled trials testing community-based interventions to improve uptake of antenatal care (media campaigns, education or financial incentives for pregnant women), and health systems interventions (home visits for pregnant women or equipment for clinics) were identified. The review highlighted several potentially effective interventions, and suggested a combination of interventions for stronger impact.

Overall, evidence on the most effective ways to increase both IPTp and AIFAS remains mixed overall, with very few studies directly identifying cost-effective ways to increase coverage of both interventions. The objective of the proposed research is to assess both the cost, impact and relative cost-effectiveness of two of the most commonly used strategies in a rural low-income setting compared to the default system. This will help to identify the most effective ways to increase antenatal iron and folic acid supplementation (AIFAS) and IPT-p coverage among pregnant women in rural Cote d'Ivoire and similar settings.

Methods Study design The study will be designed as a cluster-randomized experiment with three arms: a control arm, an information or demand generation arm, and a direct distribution arm. The investigators expected to recruit approximately 240 pregnant women for each arm, for a total sample size of 720 women. This study will be carried out in the HDSS of Taabo in south-central Côte d'Ivoire. The Taabo HDSS has continuously monitored a population of approximately 45,000 since 2009. The pilot study will target 720 pregnant women across the 132 clusters constituting the HDSS monitoring area. The 132 clusters will be split into three groups: a control group (44 clusters), an information group (44 clusters), and a distribution of free supplements group (44 clusters).

Setting The proposed research will be implemented in the Taabo health and demographic surveillance site (HDSS), located some 160 km north-west of Abidjan, the economic capital of Côte d'Ivoire. The study area is mainly rural and covers a surface area of about 980 km2, but already displays clear signs of the epidemiological transition. The Taabo HDSS is situated in the health district of Tiassalé, which has an estimated population of 200,000 people. The HDSS area includes an urban setting (Taabo-Cité), 13 villages, and more than 100 small hamlets. Demographic data (i.e. pregnancy, birth, death, and in- and out-migration) are collected longitudinally at the individual and household level, usually in three data collection rounds per year. Deaths are reported by key informants and verbal autopsies are conducted using standard protocols to determine causes of death.

Main causes of death include malaria, HIV/AIDS, and tuberculosis. The HDSS population (approximately 45,000 individuals from 8,000 households) is predominantly Ivorian, with Akan as the main ethnic group. There are ten health facilities in the Taabo HDSS area: a 12-bed hospital in Taabo-Cité and nine health centers.

Selection of study participants Recruitment Pregnant women in the first trimester of their pregnancy, living in the HDSS with an age ≥15 and ≤ 49 years will be eligible to participate in this study. They should be registered as a member in the HDSS of Taabo and willing to provide one drop of blood for hemoglobin assessment and the rapid diagnostic malaria test. Key informants will be recruited by the study team in all areas to report pregnancies as early as possible to the study staff. Key informants will be given a reward of 1,000 CFA (USD 2) for each pregnancy reported. Once the study coordinator will be informed about a new pregnancy, he will then send out an interviewer to invite pregnant women to participate in the study. Conditional on women's consent, they will be enrolled in the study and a short baseline questionnaire will be conducted. Participants may decide not to continue participating in the study at any time for any reason if they wish to do so without any particular involvement. The investigator may decide to remove a participant from the study for reasons of ethical concerns or insufficient participant recruitment.

Participant Information and consent The investigators will use a separate informed consent form for this study. A general study participation consent form that will primarily cover the baseline and endline surveys, and consent forms for the two interventions. Mothers in the information (intervention) arm will be informed about the objective of this intervention. Mothers in the supplements arm will be informed about the objective of the arm as well as the package of this intervention. These intervention consent forms will be short and administered by study staff at the beginning of their first visit.

Pregnant women below 18 years old could be treated differently and depending on the situation. For non-emancipated mothers under 18, permission to participate in the study will be sought from a legal representative in the household. For illiterate mothers, the investigators will use a thumbprint instead of a signature on the consent form.

Intervention As part of this study, the investigators will conduct two interventions: a supply side intervention ("home delivery of iron and folic acid supplements and Sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine") and a demand side intervention ("providing information on the importance of IFAS and IPTp"). In the supply side intervention women will receive a monthly home visit by study staff. During this visit study staff will inform women about recommended ANC attendance and supplementation and inquire about supplements received. All women not having received supplements from their ANC visits will be provided with a monthly dose of iron and folic acid. Similarly, all women not having received SP will be directly provided SP together with additional information and instructions on how to take the medication. At the end of each visit, study staff will remind women about their next ANC appointment and remind them to take supplements daily. On the other hand, the demand side intervention focuses on empowering pregnant mothers to adopt appropriate health practices and health behavior. Health staff (midwives and nurses) will be trained to inform women on the importance of AIFAS as well as IPTp, and then visit all women in this arm at the beginning of their pregnancy. During this visit, the nurse will talk with participating women about the benefits, side-effects, and when, why, and how to take iron and folic acid supplements and SP. The nurse will also provide pregnant women with a phone number they can call in case they have questions related to ANC, supplements or IPTp.

Data collection

Data will be collected by a trained researcher team. In addition to the baseline collection, the investigators will collect detailed monitoring data on home visits as well as cost data for the two arms. To assess the relative effectiveness of each strategy, the investigators will conduct an endline survey within the first two weeks after delivery. The form to be used to conduct the endline survey among women will combine both information on prenatal supplementation and IPTp-SP (supplements, doses, period, frequency, and date, anemia and malaria status), socio-demographic characteristics (maternal age, education attainment, household assets), and pregnancy outcome (live birth, still birth, preterm birth, birth weight,). Given that the investigators expect women's self-report on AIFAS supplementation not be very accurate, the investigators will collect hemoglobin level and malaria infection rates as primary study outcome measures at endline. Hemoglobin levels will be assessed using HEMOCUE devices; malaria infection will be tested using standard Rapid Diagnostic Tests (RDTs). All endline surveys will be conducted by study nurses who are familiar with both test procedures. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04250428
Study type Interventional
Source Centre Suisse de Recherches Scientifiques en Cote d'Ivoire
Contact
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 2020
Completion date December 2021

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