Intimate Partner Violence Clinical Trial
Official title:
Microfinance-Discussion Session Intervention in Post-Conflict Central African States
Over the last twenty years micro-finance based interventions have proven to be a popular and
often effective means of improving the economic outcomes of impoverished women. However, the
gains to microfinance based interventions on women's decision making in both economic and
non-economic arenas remains largely unknown. Specifically, the question of to what extent
does access to small-scale credit alone, rather than other programs often combined with
microfinance, affect women's empowerment is of particular interest when determining
interventions in a variety of setting in developing nations. There exists evidence that
women's empowerment is associated with reduced violence and as such maybe an important tool
for improving adult women's wellbeing. In addition increased decision making power by women
has been associated with improvement in children's health outcomes, especially for girls,
and as such may be way generating intergenerational improvements in women's outcomes.
The goal of this project is to disentangle the effects of access to credit alone from the
information on financial and personal decision making that is frequently coupled with these
programs. To accomplish this, the investigators use a randomized field experiment among
participants in Village Savings and Loans Associations (VSLA's). VSLA participants are a
self-selected group of people who pool their money into a fund from which members can
borrow. The money is paid back with interest, causing the fund to grow. The regular savings
contributions to the VSLA are deposited with an end date (usually less than 1 year) after
which all or part of the total funds are distributed to the individual members. The small
loans are paid back with interest which is determined by the group at the time of formation
and the returns from these interest payments are also distributed to the groups. The
investigators then test whether there are additional gains to women's well-being by
providing VSLA participants with training on process-based decision making to determine if
there is a need for additional efforts to improve the decision making structure in
households. To the extent that increased access to credit and more broadly financial
resources is limited by existing constraints on women's decision making power, this
additional training may be a necessary part of the creation of credit markets in improving
the health and well-being of women and children.
- How are subjects recruited? What inducement is offered? If participants are paid, what
amount and when are they paid? Is there partial pay for partial completion? (Append
copy of letter or advertisement or poster, if any.)
Subjects are voluntary participants in a Village and Savings Group organized by the
International Rescue Committee
- Salient characteristics of subjects--number who will participate, age range, sex,
institutional affiliation, other special inclusion and exclusion criteria (if children,
prisoners or other vulnerable subjects are recruited, explain why their inclusion is
necessary):
Subjects will be 600 individuals, predominantly women, aged 20-50, who reside in the Burundi
province of Makamba (in the southern part of Burundi)
- Describe how permission has been obtained from cooperating institution(s)--school,
hospital, corporation, prison, or other relevant organization. (Append letters.) Is the
approval of other research compliance committees or another Institutional Review Board
required?
Jodi Nelson: (protocols)
- What do subjects do, or what is done to them, or what information is gathered? (Append
copies of instructions, tests, questionnaires, or interview guides to be used.) How
many times will observations, tests, etc., be conducted? How long will their
participation take? Are interviews to be tape recorded or videotaped?
Everyone in the sample (N=600) is in a VSLA with its financial design previously determined.
Half of the sample will be treated as the "control" group and will not receive the
treatment. Of this sample, in half of the VSLA's the investigators will ask the spouse to
accompany the member to one payment meeting. A baseline survey will be conducted in January
2008 to gather basic demographic information as well as pre-treatment levels of variables of
interest The training/discussion groups will take place over several months are intended to
promote joint decision-making. conduct a post-treatment survey to determine immediate gains
from the treatment. After another 1-2 months, the investigators will conduct a final survey
to determine the survival rate of any changes. Interviews will be recorded in written form
to be input into computerized data management systems.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
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