Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04184544 |
Other study ID # |
0979-3131 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
March 1, 2017 |
Est. completion date |
June 30, 2023 |
Study information
Verified date |
August 2021 |
Source |
Aga Khan University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The Umeed-e-Nau (UeN) initiative aims to support the introduction, scale up, and further
piloting of high quality and high impact interventions to improve Maternal, Newborn And Child
Health (MNCH)in Pakistan by harnessing the potential of both public and private sectors,
coupled with introduction of women and girls empowerment interventions. UeN has two major
components: 1) Introducing proven effective MNCH interventions at scale in 8 rural districts
of Pakistan, and 2) Generating evidence on innovative approaches to improve MNCH while
included in public health programs in Pakistan. There are six trials that are being conducted
to address different evidences gaps to improve maternal, newborn and child health in
Pakistan. The protocols of the trials will be registered separately.
Description:
Pakistan's continued high maternal, neonatal, and child mortality is affecting the overall
development and national growth. The estimated national maternal mortality ratio ranges from
250 - 750 per 100,000 live births per year, while neonatal mortality rate ranges from 43 - 66
per 1,000 live births per year across the provinces of Pakistan. The under-five mortality
rate is 89 per 1,000 live births per year, and diarrhea and pneumonia are two of the most
common causes of post-neonatal mortality. Together, they account for more than 30% of all
under five deaths in Pakistan.
Majority of maternal, newborn and child deaths are preventable and treatable given programs
are designed and delivered through an efficient public health system that takes into account
the geographic and social structures. There are several factors resulting in slow progress
and improvement of MNCH indicators. These include poor coverage, delayed scale up of
effective interventions within the existing health system platforms, lack of women's and
girls' empowerment, voice, and participation, and lack of community awareness and support
regarding health conditions and poverty. Many of the risk factors that impact maternal and
newborn health, such as nutritional deficiencies, exist from adolescence, and becoming
pregnant during this sensitive life stage has been found to slow and stunt one's growth In
order to evaluate the impact of the UeN initiative quasi experimental study design will be
used. The intervention groups are broadly divided into two groups. Both groups will serve as
control against each other due to nature of targeting of age group by each intervention group
type. Group one included maternal and newborn health districts. These districts are further
divided into three sub groups. Sub group 1 will receive only interventions focusing on
maternal health (1 district (Sangher)); sub group 2 will receive interventions focusing only
on newborn health (1 district (Nasirabad)); sub group 3 will receive combined maternal and
newborn interventions (two districts (Lasbila and Badin). Group two will receive child health
interventions focusing on the implementation of the global action plan for pneumonia and
diarrhea (GAPPD [4districts, Qamabar Shahdadkot Muzaffargarh, Rahim Yar Khan Jafferabad).
This design will help us to evaluate independent and combined effect of maternal, newborn,
and child health interventions to address maternal, newborn and child health outcomes. We
hypothesize that the roll out of proven and effective interventions within existing health
delivery platforms for maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health will lead to
significant reduction in perinatal mortality rate (20% compared to baseline) and at least 30%
reduction in diarrhea and pneumonia case fatality rate in the target project districts.
UeN design justification: The conceptual framework for UeN postulates that increased
engagement with communities, empowering women and girls, including addressing access
barriers; 2) strengthening capacity of the public and private health sectors mainly through
revision of curricula based on new evidence, developing management protocols for different
cadre of health workers and providers on MNCH and training; private Sector engagement; 3)
provision of sustained supplies and 4) District Health Information System (DHIS) data use for
decision making will lead to greater responsiveness of public and private service providers
to women's and girls' needs - particularly those of undeserved women, girls and children. The
UeN initiative aims to create opportunities in governance processes through revival and
participation in District Health Management team (DHMTs), service delivery and citizens'
voice and empowerment to transform public and private health sector interactions to drive
improvements in MNCH and survival