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NCT ID: NCT04504617 Active, not recruiting - Infant Malnutrition Clinical Trials

Nutrition Education Intervention to Enhance Complementary Feeding Practices Among Infants in Southern Ethiopia

Start date: December 2, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Child undernutrition is a worldwide public health problem that has persisted in African countries. For instance, the most recently reported prevalence rates of stunting (38%), underweight (24%), and wasting (10%) among children under the age of five in Ethiopia is higher than the global prevalence. The causes of undernutrition are classified in the following manner: immediate causes, such as inadequate dietary intakes; underlying causes, such as household food insecurity and inadequate care and feeding practices; and basic causes, which involve the household's inadequate access to education, employment, and income, among others. Evidence has demonstrated that nutrition education interventions (NEI) may influence both underlying and immediate causes of child undernutrition. For instance, nutrition education interventions have the potential of preventing the underlying causes of child undernutrition by improving mothers' knowledge in care and feeding practices, and further improving the quality and quantity of dietary intake, which is considered an immediate cause of child undernutrition. Moreover, nutrition education interventions designed to improve infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices, such as dietary diversity, frequency, and adequacy, are considered a high impact strategy that may substantially reduce stunting. Preliminary data from Hawassa University (collaborating institution in this project) demonstrated that approximately 86% of the children residing in Arsi Negele, Wondo Genet, and Dale districts in Oromia and Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples' (SNNP) regions in Ethiopia do not receive adequate complementary feeding practices. Such lack of optimal complementary feeding practices may compromise a child's growth, development, and survival. Therefore, there is a critical need for improving child complementary feeding practices to promote their well-being and adequate nutritional status. Thus, the main purpose of this study is to improve child feeding practices and related nutritional status by improving the mother's knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) of complementary feeding practices for their children aged six to 23 months in three woredas located in Oromia and SNNP. It is hypothesized that after the NEI mothers will improve their children' dietary diversity, frequency and adequacy.

NCT ID: NCT04149210 Active, not recruiting - Eye Diseases Clinical Trials

FLuorometholone as Adjunctive MEdical Therapy for TT Surgery (FLAME) Trial

FLAME
Start date: June 14, 2021
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study aims : - To assess the efficacy of fluorometholone 0.1% one drop twice daily for four weeks in reducing the incidence of post-operative trachomatous trichiasis (TT) when given as adjunctive therapy with TT surgery in the programmatic setting - To assess whether such treatment is sufficiently safe for wide-scale implementation in TT programs. - To estimate the costs of adding fluorometholone 0.1% treatment to TT surgery per case of postoperative TT averted, and to characterize the value of such treatment under a range of plausible health economic circumstances

NCT ID: NCT03890237 Active, not recruiting - Adolescent Behavior Clinical Trials

GAGE Act With Her-Ethiopia Evaluation

Start date: March 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the impact of Act With Her Ethiopia (AWH-E), a gender transformative multi-level program that aims to improve the lives of young adolescent boys and girls.

NCT ID: NCT03761459 Active, not recruiting - Surgery Clinical Trials

Current Surgical Practices and Surgical Site Infection at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital in Mekelle, Ethiopia

Start date: March 20, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

This study evaluates the current surgical practices at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital in comparison to the World Health Organization's Surgical Unit Based Safety Programme guidelines and aims to determine how deviations from those guidelines are associated with varying rates of surgical site infection incidence in this population. The results of this study will help elucidate risk factors for surgical site infection and prioritize future interventions to decrease the rate of surgical site infection at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital, as well as other low and middle-income hospitals. The data collected regarding surgical site infection rates will also prove beneficial in measuring outcomes of any interventions that are developed as a result of this study.

NCT ID: NCT02344498 Active, not recruiting - Hepatitis B Clinical Trials

Treatment of Hepatitis B in Resource-limited Settings - a Pilot Program in East Africa

Start date: January 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Viral hepatitis kills nearly one million people each year, even though effective treatment exists. The aim of this study is to establish a treatment protocol for hepatitis B, which is simple and cheap enough to be implemented in resource-limited settings.

NCT ID: NCT02084225 Active, not recruiting - Pain Management Clinical Trials

Ultrasound Guided Regional Anesthesia for Acute Injury in Low Resource Settings

Start date: January 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to determine feasibility, perceived utility and sustainability of training local providers in ultrasound guided regional anesthesia for acute pain management in a limited-resource conflict setting.