Possible, Kathmandu, Nepal.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.
Implement Sci. 2018 Mar 29;13(1):53. doi: 10.1186/s13012-018-0741-x.
Evidence-based medicines, technologies, and protocols exist to prevent many of the annual 300,000 maternal, 2.7 million neonatal, and 9 million child deaths, but they are not being effectively implemented and utilized in rural areas. Nepal, one of South Asia's poorest countries with over 80% of its population living in rural areas, exemplifies this challenge. Community health workers are an important cadre in low-income countries where human resources for health and health care infrastructure are limited. As local women, they are uniquely positioned to understand and successfully navigate barriers to health care access. Recent case studies of large community health worker programs have highlighted the importance of training, both initial and ongoing, and accountability through structured management, salaries, and ongoing monitoring and evaluation. A gap in the evidence regarding whether such community health worker systems can change health outcomes, as well as be sustainably adopted at scale, remains. In this study, we plan to evaluate a community health worker system delivering an evidence-based integrated reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health intervention as it is scaled up in rural Nepal.
We will conduct a type 2 hybrid effectiveness-implementation study to test both the effect of an integrated reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health intervention and the implementation process via a professional community health worker system. The intervention integrates five evidence-based approaches: (1) home-based antenatal care and post-natal care counseling and care coordination; (2) continuous surveillance of all reproductive age women, pregnancies, and children under age 2 years via a mobile application; (3) Community-Based Integrated Management of Newborn and Childhood Illness; (4) group antenatal and postnatal care; and 5) the Balanced Counseling Strategy to post-partum contraception. We will evaluate effectiveness using a pre-post quasi-experimental design with stepped implementation and implementation using the RE-AIM framework.
This is the first hybrid effectiveness-implementation study of an integrated reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health intervention in rural Nepal that we are aware of. As Nepal takes steps towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals, the data from this three-year study will be useful in the detailed planning of a professionalized community health worker cadre delivering evidence-based reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health interventions to the country's rural population.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03371186 , registered 04 December 2017, retrospectively registered.
有循证医学、技术和方案可以预防每年 30 万孕产妇、270 万新生儿和 900 万儿童死亡,但这些方案在农村地区并未得到有效实施和利用。尼泊尔是南亚最贫穷的国家之一,超过 80%的人口居住在农村地区,这一挑战在该国表现得尤为明显。社区卫生工作者是人力资源和医疗保健基础设施有限的低收入国家的重要干部。作为当地妇女,她们具有独特的优势,可以理解并成功克服获得医疗保健的障碍。最近对大型社区卫生工作者计划的案例研究强调了培训的重要性,包括初始培训和持续培训,以及通过结构化管理、工资和持续监测和评估来实现问责制。关于这种社区卫生工作者系统是否可以改变健康结果以及是否可以可持续地大规模采用,仍然存在证据上的差距。在这项研究中,我们计划评估在尼泊尔农村地区扩大规模的一种提供循证综合生殖、孕产妇、新生儿和儿童健康干预措施的社区卫生工作者系统。
我们将进行 2 型混合有效性-实施研究,以测试综合生殖、孕产妇、新生儿和儿童健康干预措施的效果以及通过专业社区卫生工作者系统实施的过程。该干预措施整合了五种循证方法:(1)基于家庭的产前和产后护理咨询和护理协调;(2)通过移动应用程序连续监测所有育龄妇女、妊娠和 2 岁以下儿童;(3)社区综合管理新生儿和儿童疾病;(4)群体产前和产后护理;以及 5)产后避孕的平衡咨询策略。我们将使用预-后准实验设计和逐步实施来评估效果,并使用 RE-AIM 框架评估实施情况。
这是我们所知的尼泊尔农村地区首例综合生殖、孕产妇、新生儿和儿童健康干预措施的混合有效性-实施研究。随着尼泊尔迈向实现可持续发展目标,这项为期三年的研究数据将有助于为该国农村人口提供循证生殖、孕产妇、新生儿和儿童健康干预措施的专业化社区卫生工作者干部的详细规划提供有用信息。
ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT03371186,于 2017 年 12 月 4 日注册,为回顾性注册。