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Clinical Trial Summary

Studies in several countries with a high rate of death of infants during the first week of life have found a reduction in infection and mortality when chlorhexidine is applied to the umbilical cord stump by a health worker within 24 hours of birth. This study will evaluate if providing chlorhexidine to pregnant women during a prenatal care visit for application to the cord stump after birth will be as effective for preventing omphalitis (infection of the umbilical cord stump) as sending a community health worker into the home to apply the chlorhexidine.


Clinical Trial Description

Neonatal mortality continues to be unacceptably high in Kenya and other Sub-Saharan African countries, with little improvement over the past several decades. Neonatal infections and sepsis are a leading cause of neonatal deaths. Three fourths of these deaths occur in the first week of life. Many deliveries in rural Kenya take place at home in unhygienic conditions and the umbilical cord is cut with unsterile instruments, increasing the risk of infection. Studies in several countries with a high neonatal mortality rate have found a reduction in infection and mortality when chlorhexidine is applied to the umbilical cord stump by a health worker within 24 hours of birth. This randomized noninferiority study in rural Kenya will compare the effectiveness of a newborn home visitation program that includes application of chlorhexidine to the umbilical cord by a visiting community health worker (CHW) to the provision of chlorhexidine to the mother during a prenatal care visit for cord application on the rate of omphalitis (infection of the umbilical cord stump) during the first week of life. Pregnant women will be randomly assigned in a 1:1 ration to be given or not be given chlorhexidine digluconate 7.1% gel during a prenatal care visit with instruction to apply the product as soon as possible after birth. The pregnant women who do not receive the chlorhexidine will be assigned a CHW with instruction to apply the product during a home visit within 24 hours of birth. The rate of omphalitis will be determined during home visits by the CHW on days three and seven after birth, and by a visiting research nurse on the seventh day. The time from birth to chlorhexidine application will also be recorded and compared in the two groups. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02624622
Study type Interventional
Source University of New Mexico
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
Start date March 2015
Completion date January 2017

See also
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