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Maternal Health Services clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Maternal Health Services.

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NCT ID: NCT05385380 Completed - Clinical trials for Maternal Health Services

A Cluster Randomized Controlled Intervention to Improve Institutional Birth Rate in a Rural District of Ethiopia

Start date: September 14, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Despite the efforts from the government, maternal healthcare services utilization is far below the recommended level in Ethiopia with a high urban-rural disparity. Currently, two-thirds of pregnant women do not receive the recommended number of antenatal care, more than 50% of births are not attended by skilled birth attendants, and two-thirds of postpartum women do not receive postnatal checks, according to the 2019 EDHS report. There is also evidence that the rate of continuity of maternity care completion is low, implying that pregnant women are not getting the most out of the existing healthcare services. In Ethiopia, the rural communities are scattered over a wide geographic area some with difficult mountains and valleys. Hence, geographic barriers and limited information sources are likely to influence women's access to skilled birth attendance. As part of improving access and overcoming physical or geographical inaccessibility in rural areas, maternity waiting homes; residential lodgings built near healthcare facilities where expectant women near or at term would stay till the onset of labor is one of the measures taken by the Ethiopian government. The majority of the rural populations commonly have a lower perception of health services in general, and many traditional practices support behaviors that are inconsistent with effective health interventions. Thus, there is a challenge concerning behavior (social norms, beliefs, and culture) from the demand side related to utilizing maternity services on top of non/partial functionality of existing waiting homes. Therefore, this research project aimed at promoting access to and utilization of maternal healthcare services utilization in southern Ethiopia.

NCT ID: NCT04039932 Completed - Prenatal Care Clinical Trials

Faith Leaders Advocating for Maternal Empowerment (FLAME)

Start date: June 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In 2015, the average Ethiopian woman had a 1 in 64 lifetime risk of death due to complications of childbirth and 87,414 newborns died before their 28th day of life. Demand for MNCH services, however, remains low in Ethiopia's rural communities most at risk with only 16% of women delivering in a health facility. The investigator's project responds to the challenge of creating demand for existing MNCH services in rural Ethiopia, which fell short of reaching Millennium Development Goal targets for reducing preventable maternal and neonatal deaths. This study addresses two strategic drivers to prevent maternal mortality identified by USAID including improving individual, household, and community behaviors and norms and increasing equity of access and use of services by the most vulnerable. The primary objective of the study is to determine the impact of a behavior change intervention that partners Ethiopian Orthodox priests with members of the Health Development Army (HDA) and trains them to conduct maternal health outreach to increase births attended by skilled health personnel among women who attend ≥1 ANC visits.

NCT ID: NCT02786225 Completed - Prenatal Care Clinical Trials

Collaboration for Antepartum Risk Evaluation

CARE
Start date: July 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Perinatal outcomes in the US rank behind most other developed countries even though women in the US utilize more maternity services. Current approaches to consultation and collaboration among perinatal care providers, including nurse-midwives, obstetricians, and perinatologists, fragment care resulting in communication errors and maternal dissatisfaction. The CARE study will test an innovative interdisciplinary consult visit to improve communication, teamwork, maternal satisfaction, and perinatal outcomes.