Ekjut, Potka, Po-Chakradharpur, District West Singhbhum, Jharkhand, India.
Trials. 2011 Jul 25;12:182. doi: 10.1186/1745-6215-12-182.
Around a quarter of the world's neonatal and maternal deaths occur in India. Morbidity and mortality are highest in rural areas and among the poorest wealth quintiles. Few interventions to improve maternal and newborn health outcomes with government-mandated community health workers have been rigorously evaluated at scale in this setting.The study aims to assess the impact of a community mobilisation intervention with women's groups facilitated by ASHAs to improve maternal and newborn health outcomes among rural tribal communities of Jharkhand and Orissa.
METHODS/DESIGN: The study is a cluster-randomised controlled trial and will be implemented in five districts, three in Jharkhand and two in Orissa. The unit of randomisation is a rural cluster of approximately 5000 population. We identified villages within rural, tribal areas of five districts, approached them for participation in the study and enrolled them into 30 clusters, with approximately 10 ASHAs per cluster. Within each district, 6 clusters were randomly allocated to receive the community intervention or to the control group, resulting in 15 intervention and 15 control clusters. Randomisation was carried out in the presence of local stakeholders who selected the cluster numbers and allocated them to intervention or control using a pre-generated random number sequence. The intervention is a participatory learning and action cycle where ASHAs support community women's groups through a four-phase process in which they identify and prioritise local maternal and newborn health problems, implement strategies to address these and evaluate the result. The cycle is designed to fit with the ASHAs' mandate to mobilise communities for health and to complement their other tasks, including increasing institutional delivery rates and providing home visits to mothers and newborns. The trial's primary endpoint is neonatal mortality during 24 months of intervention. Additional endpoints include home care practices and health care-seeking in the antenatal, delivery and postnatal period. The impact of the intervention will be measured through a prospective surveillance system implemented by the project team, through which mothers will be interviewed around six weeks after delivery. Cost data and qualitative data are collected for cost-effectiveness and process evaluations.
ISRCTN: ISRCTN31567106.
全球约四分之一的新生儿和产妇死亡发生在印度。发病率和死亡率在农村地区以及最贫困的五分之一人口中最高。在这种情况下,很少有政府授权的社区卫生工作者干预措施经过严格评估可以改善母婴健康结果。本研究旨在评估通过 ASHAs 为农村部落社区的妇女团体提供社区动员干预,以改善孕产妇和新生儿健康结果的效果。
方法/设计:该研究是一项整群随机对照试验,将在五个地区实施,其中三个在恰尔肯德邦,两个在奥里萨邦。随机单位是一个约 5000 人的农村集群。我们在五个地区的农村部落地区确定了村庄,邀请他们参与研究并将他们纳入 30 个集群,每个集群约有 10 名 ASHAs。在每个地区,6 个集群被随机分配接受社区干预或对照组,从而产生 15 个干预组和 15 个对照组。随机化是在当地利益攸关方在场的情况下进行的,他们选择集群编号,并使用预先生成的随机数序列将其分配给干预组或对照组。干预措施是一个参与式学习和行动周期,ASHAs 通过四个阶段的过程支持社区妇女团体,在这个过程中,他们确定并优先考虑当地母婴健康问题,实施解决这些问题的策略,并评估结果。该周期旨在符合 ASHAs 动员社区进行健康的任务,并补充他们的其他任务,包括提高机构分娩率和为母亲和新生儿提供家访。试验的主要终点是干预的 24 个月内新生儿死亡率。其他终点包括围产期家庭护理实践和医疗保健寻求。干预的影响将通过项目团队实施的前瞻性监测系统进行测量,通过该系统,将在分娩后大约六周对母亲进行访谈。为了进行成本效益和过程评估,收集了成本数据和定性数据。
ISRCTN:ISRCTN31567106。