Pallitto Christina, García-Moreno Claudia, Stöeckl Heidi, Hatcher Abigail, MacPhail Catherine, Mokoatle Keneoue, Woollett Nataly
Department of Reproductive Health and Research, World Health Organization, Avenue Appia 20, 1211, Geneva, Switzerland.
Gender Violence and Health Centre, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London, WC1H 9SE, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2016 Nov 5;16(1):630. doi: 10.1186/s12913-016-1872-x.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) during or before pregnancy is associated with many adverse health outcomes. Pregnancy-related complications or poor infant health outcomes can arise from direct trauma as well as physiological effects of stress, both of which impact maternal health and fetal growth and development. Antenatal care can be a key entry point within the health system for many women, particularly in low-resource settings. Interventions to identify violence during pregnancy and offer women support and counselling may reduce the occurrence of violence and mitigate its consequences.
Following a formative research phase, a randomized controlled trial will be conducted to test a nurse-led empowerment counselling intervention, originally developed for high-income settings and adapted for urban South Africa. The primary outcome is reduction of partner violence, and secondary outcomes include improvement in women's mental health, safety and self-efficacy. The study aims to recruit 504 pregnant women from three antenatal clinics in Johannesburg who will be randomized to the nurse-led empowerment arm (two 30-min counselling sessions) or enhanced control condition (a referral list) to determine whether participants in the intervention arm have better outcomes as compared to the those in the control arm.
This research will provide much needed evidence on whether a short counselling intervention delivered by nurses is efficacious and feasible in low resource settings that have high prevalence of IPV and HIV.
The study was registered in the South African Clinical Trials Registry (DOH-27-0414-4720) on 11 August 2014 and in the ISRCTN Registry ( ISRCTN35969343 ) on 23 May 2016).
孕期或孕前的亲密伴侣暴力与许多不良健康后果相关。妊娠相关并发症或婴儿健康不良后果可能源于直接创伤以及压力的生理影响,这两者都会影响孕产妇健康以及胎儿生长发育。产前护理对于许多女性而言可能是卫生系统中的一个关键切入点,尤其是在资源匮乏地区。识别孕期暴力并为女性提供支持和咨询的干预措施可能会减少暴力的发生并减轻其后果。
在一个形成性研究阶段之后,将开展一项随机对照试验,以测试一种由护士主导的赋权咨询干预措施,该措施最初是为高收入环境开发的,现已针对南非城市地区进行了调整。主要结局是伴侣暴力行为的减少,次要结局包括女性心理健康、安全和自我效能的改善。该研究旨在从约翰内斯堡的三家产前诊所招募504名孕妇,并将她们随机分为护士主导的赋权组(两次30分钟的咨询课程)或强化对照组(一份转诊清单),以确定干预组的参与者与对照组的参与者相比是否有更好的结局。
这项研究将提供急需的证据,证明护士提供的简短咨询干预措施在亲密伴侣暴力和艾滋病毒高发的低资源环境中是否有效和可行。
该研究于2014年8月11日在南非临床试验注册中心(DOH-27-0414-4720)注册,并于2016年5月23日在国际标准随机对照试验编号注册库(ISRCTN35969343)注册。