Capacity Building Clinical Trial
— IDCAPOfficial title:
Cost Effectiveness of Building Capacity of Mid-level Practitioners in Sub-Saharan Africa for the Care and Prevention of HIV, Tuberculosis, Malaria and Related Infectious Diseases
This evaluation aim is to investigate a cost-effective way to build capacity for the care and prevention of infectious diseases among mid-level practitioners (MLP) in sub-Saharan Africa. Classroom based training continues to be the dominant form of training, despite evidence that suggests that on-site support (OSS) is more beneficial. Definitive evidence that on-site support is the most effective way to deliver the required outputs and related outcomes is still lacking. IDCAP will provide two interventions that integrate training in TB, HIV/AIDS and malaria as well as other infectious diseases, and the effects will be studied: 1) Integrated Management of Infectious Disease (IMID) training program for individual MLP, and 2) On-site support (OSS) for team of health professionals. This study employs a mixed design with pre/post and cluster randomized trial components. Interventions are at the level of the individual participant for IMID and at the level of the site (health facility) for OSS. All participants attend a 3-week course, followed by two 1-week booster courses over a six month period. After the 3-week course, a randomized arm of half the sampled facilities also received OSS every month for 9 months and bi-monthly for 6 additional months.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 72 |
Est. completion date | August 2012 |
Est. primary completion date | August 2012 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Both |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: Facilities selected for OSS: - The health facility had to be a HC IV or comparable facility such as a small general hospital or non-governmental organization clinic - It had to be an active ART site or accredited ART site that is scheduled to become active by April 2009 - No past or current participation in a partnership with the U.S. Department of Defense - Has a population of potential patients who are not prisoners - Representation from all six administrative regions of Uganda Exclusion Criteria: MLP selected from the participating facilities for IMID: Two mid-level practitioners (clinical officers, nurses, or midwives) who are actively engaged in clinical infectious-disease care will be selected for enrollment in IMID |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Uganda | Infectious Disease Institute, Makerere University | Kampala |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Washington | Accordia Global Health Foundation, Makerere University |
Uganda,
The Uganda Bureau of Statistics (UBOS), Macro International Inc., and MEASURE Evaluation. 2008. Uganda Child Verbal Autopsy Study 2007. Calverton, Maryland, USA: UBOS, Macro International Inc., and MEASURE Evaluation.
Weaver M, Krieger J, Castorina J, et. al.
World Health Organization. Generalized Cost-Effeciveness Analysis: A Guide. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2003. Available online at: http://www.who.int/choice/en/ Accessed on April 14, 2008.
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Model of Integrated Capacity Building Program | The principal output of this evaluation will be a proven model of an integrated capacity-building package for the care and prevention of infectious disease in Africa. The package will include a single curriculum for MLP and a portfolio of on-site support services founded on Accordia Global Health Foundation's considerable experience in training clinicians in North America and Africa. | monthly over 3 years | Yes |
Primary | Competence of individual clinicians | Competence of individual clinicians will be measured by scores on 12 written case scenarios or vignettes. Three blocks of 4 scenarios each covered different aspects of HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and other infectious diseases and included cases involving children, adults, and pregnant women. Each case scenario addressed 6 principal domains: emergency or danger signs, history and physical examination, laboratory testing, diagnosis or classification of patients' medical problems; initial treatment or referral plan, and evolution of the case over time. | 3 observations at pre/post IMID and final | No |
Primary | Practice of individual clinicians | Clinical assessments will be conducted by mobile team faculty who will observe individual clinicians during five outpatient visits with children under five years and five HIV clinic visits. Clinical practice will be assessed on history, physical examination, review of medical records (HIV clinic only), laboratory investigations ordered, diagnosis, treatment prescribed and patient education. | Baseline and Endline (9 months) | No |
Primary | Clinical performance indicators | 54 clinical performance indicators used by the Ministry of Health, the Uganda Malaria Surveillance Program or recommended by international organizations will be used to measure performance in general areas: 1) HIV prevention, 2) HIV care, 3) Antiretroviral therapy, 4) TB/HIV care, 5) Case management of respiratory infections, 6) Case Management of Fever, and 7) Emergency Triage and Treatment. | Monthly beginning 5 months before OSS | No |
Secondary | Reduce Infection, Illness, and Mortality Rates | The population in the areas surrounding the proposed sites will benefit directly from lower infection, illness and mortality rates. The improved ability of clinic staff to deliver quality prevention and care services will increase access to cost-effective interventions delivered according to national guidelines by 9% to 25% depending on the intervention. | 3 years | Yes |
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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