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NCT ID: NCT05697822 Not yet recruiting - Maternal Health Clinical Trials

Using Advanced Data Systems to Improve Health in Early Life in Rural Nepal

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

The goal of this cluster randomized controlled trial is to study the effect of a mobile-phone based application used by pregnant women on maternal and newborn health indicators. The main objective is to compare the rates of institutional deliveries in the intervention and control arms. Ancillary objectives are to compare the birth-preparedness and complication readiness parameters, severe maternal morbidity rates and neonatal adverse outcomes rates in the two arms. The participants are pregnant women. In the intervention arm pregnant women will be given a smart mobile phone with an application that they will use to input information related to their health. This information can be shared with their healthcare workers. The healthcare workers will also be able to access all the health-related details of the pregnant women and mothers under their care by accessing this app in their mobile phones and be in touch with their patients through the mobile phone application. The control arm will adhere to existing practices of pregnant woman and health worker communication without the use of a smart mobile phone with an existing application. Records related to the pregnant woman will be kept in paper-based forms as is the usual norm. The investigators will compare the intervention arm and the control arm to see if there are differences in the rates of the outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT05525429 Not yet recruiting - Undernutrition Clinical Trials

Enhancing Milk Consumption by Vulnerable Household Members in Rural Nepal

Start date: July 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Diet quality is generally poor in rural Nepal, especially among vulnerable household members. Consumption of milk (and other animal source foods [ASF]) could contribute to improvements in diet quality. However, multiple cultural, structural and economic barriers constrain the inclusion of ASF in the diet in these households, even though most raise dairy animals. This study will 1. characterize these barriers in detail 2. conduct a randomized controlled trial to test a multi-dimensional behavior change intervention designed to increase ASF/milk consumption by young children 6-60 months, adolescent girls 10-15 years, and women of child-bearing age (WCBA). Matched clusters of villages in Kapilbastu and Nawalparasi districts (Nepal) will be randomized to Intervention or Control status. Household surveys will be conducted at baseline and 12 months later to collect demographic, diet, feeding practices, nutrition knowledge, etc. Fathers and adolescent girls will respond to mini-surveys. Growth parameters of children, adolescent girls, and WCBA will be assessed. The intervention consists of 4 components: 1) didactic training (mothers, fathers, adolescent girls), 2) participatory learning activities (mothers, fathers, adolescent girls), 3) model kitchens (mothers, adolescent girls), and 4) Nutrition Club (adolescent girls). The primary outcome will be the impact of the intervention on diet, household feeding practices, and nutrition knowledge.

NCT ID: NCT05378438 Not yet recruiting - Vaccine Acceptance Clinical Trials

Impact of Microbe Literacy Initiative on Improved Vaccine Uptake in Peri-urban Slum Areas in Kathmandu, Nepal

Start date: July 15, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is designed to assess the impact of the first introduction of microscope-based health education on people's attitude and practice towards disease prevention in Nepal, measured by vaccine acceptance rate. Such health education has an important role to play in communities where vaccine acceptance is low.

NCT ID: NCT04526847 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Overweight and Obesity

Intermittent Fasting Compared to Continuous Energy Restriction on Body Weight Loss

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

Obesity remains a major public health challenge. Intermittent fasting continues to gain popularity compared to continuous energy restriction as a weight-loss approach for cardiometabolic health. Studies to date comparing intermittent energy restriction (IER) and continuous energy restriction (CER) have not been investigated on weight loss and cardiometabolic risk markers in low-income countries like Nepal. The main objective of this study is to compare the effectiveness of IER versus CER diet on weight loss and cardiometabolic risk markers over the course of six months among overweight/obese Nepalese population. This study will adopt a parallel arm, open-label, randomized control trial design. The study duration will be six months from baseline to endline. A total of 112 overweight and obese participants, aged 18-64 years, with waist circumference >90 cm (men) and >80 cm (women) will be enrolled in the study. Interested participants will be approached through social media and consecutively enrolled and assigned to either IER group (n=56) or CER group (n=56) randomly. Participants will be provided Mediterranean pattern dietary intervention including two groups: IER group will receive 5:2 diet pattern (5 day without energy restriction and 2 days with 75% energy restriction, net weekly energy deficit ~25%), and CER group with a low-calorie diet (daily energy deficit ~25%) over the course of six months. Both IER and CER group will be provided personalized diet plan, portion size, nutrition counseling focus on dietary guidance, motivational strategies, and personal goal setting for behavior change with educational materials. Baseline data will be collected using a structured questionnaire and the biochemical tests will be done. Baseline data will be collected at the time of enrollment, midline in three months, and end-line data collection in six months. The primary outcome of this study will be the change in weight loss between IER and CER groups. The secondary outcome measure will be to evaluate changes in nutritional composition, eating behavior, and cardiometabolic risk markers between IER and CER group over six months. Data will be entered using Epidata Software and transferred to the Stata/MP version 14.1 for further analysis. Data will be analyzed using an intention-to-treat basis. Independent t-test and, repeated measures ANOVA will be used to estimate changes between-group comparisons. The significance level will be assumed at p<0.05

NCT ID: NCT04510909 Not yet recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

COMMIT Depression Trial Nepal

Start date: August 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Community health workers (CHWs) have successfully used Motivational Interviewing (MI) to improve treatment adherence (i.e. taking medications and attending clinic appointments) for patients with depression in the US and globally. Mobile health (mHealth) tools can address challenges in implementing MI by providing real-time support in the community and facilitating ongoing coaching and supervision for CHWs, as these two challenges currently impede CHWs' ability to use MI. The investigators will develop then test a new mHealth app, which can potentially be used in the US and abroad, to help CHWs receive decision-support for MI and capture consented audio recordings of patient interactions for review and feedback by facility-based nurses with MI expertise.

NCT ID: NCT03700034 Not yet recruiting - Anemia Clinical Trials

mHealth Integrated Model of Hypertension, Diabetes and Antenatal Care in India and Nepal

Start date: December 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Our research aims to address a critical gap in the provision of quality antenatal care (ANC) in India and Nepal, by developing and evaluating an intervention comprising of a tablet-based electronic decision support system (EDSS). This intervention -"mIRA" - is an mHealth integrated model of hypertension, diabetes, and antenatal care in primary care settings. mIRA aims to (a) prompt frontline health workers (FHWs) to provide evidence-based routine ANC, and also enhance the detection and management of Pregnancy Induced Hypertension (PIH), Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM), and anemia, whilst improving adherence to National ANC guidelines; (b) facilitate record-keeping and reporting and; (c) link providers across various levels of care to improve continuity of care. A cluster randomized controlled (cRCT) to assess the effectiveness of the mIRA EDSS in improving ANC and enhancing the detection and management of Pregnancy Induced Hypertension (PIH), Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM), and anemia will be conducted in Telangana, India. A mixed-methods process evaluation will be conducted in both India and Nepal. The process evaluation will contribute to our understanding of the mechanisms contributing to changes (improvement) in the quality of ANC by using the EDSS intervention.

NCT ID: NCT03359915 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

GECo: Implementation and Effectiveness of COPD Self Management Action Plans in Low and Middle Income Countries

GECo2
Start date: December 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will randomise people with clinically significant COPD (GOLD Grade B-D) to usual care or provision of a self-management action plan supported by monthly follow-up visits from a community health worker trained in the use of the action plan. The primary outcome will be health-status: a comparison of the change in St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) between baseline and 12 months in the two groups. We will randomise 240 people from three low- and middle-income countries, namely Nepal, Peru and Uganda. We will also examine the feasibility of implementing our self-management action plan intervention at scale.

NCT ID: NCT02598024 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

Treating Earthquake in Nepal Trauma (TENT) Trial 2016

TENT2016
Start date: March 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether two types of short-term trauma-focused therapies (individual Narrative Exposure Therapy and group-based Control-Focused Behavioural Treatment) are effective in the treatment of chronic PTSD in earthquake survivors of Nepal.