Abwenzi Pa Za Umoyo/Partners In Health, Neno, Malawi.
Partners In Health Liberia, Harper, Liberia.
BMJ Open. 2018 Jul 13;8(7):e019473. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-019473.
This protocol concerns the implementation and evaluation of an intervention designed to realign the existing cadre of community health workers (CHWs) in Neno district, Malawi to better support the care needs of the clients they serve. The proposed intervention is a 'Household Model' where CHWs will be reassigned to households, rather than to specific patients with HIV and/or tuberculosis (TB).
Using a stepped-wedge, cluster-randomised design, this study investigates whether high HIV retention rates can be replicated for non-communicable diseases (NCDs), and the model's impact on TB and paediatric malnutrition case finding, as well as the uptake of family planning and antenatal care. Eleven sites (health centres and hospitals) were arranged into six clusters (average cluster population 21 800). Primary outcomes include retention in care for HIV and chronic NCDs, TB case finding, paediatric malnutrition case finding, and utilisation of early and complete antenatal care. Clinical outcomes are based on routinely collected data from the Ministry of Health's District Health Information System 2 and an OpenMRS electronic medical record supported by Partners In Health. Additionally, semistructured qualitative interviews with various stakeholders will assess community perceptions and context of the Household Model.
Ethics approval has been obtained from the Malawian National Health Science Research Committee (#16/11/1694) in Lilongwe, Malawi; Partners Healthcare Human Research Committee (#2017P000548/PHS) in Somerville, Massachusetts; and the Biomedical and Scientific Research Ethics Sub-Committee (REGO-2017-2060) at the University of Warwick in Coventry, UK. Dissemination will include manuscripts for peer-reviewed publication as well as a full report detailing the findings of the intervention for the Malawian Ministry of Health.
NCT03106727.
Partners In Health | Abwenzi Pa Za Umoyo P.O. Box 56, Neno, Malawi. Protocol Version 4, March 2018.
本方案涉及实施和评估一项干预措施,旨在重新调整位于马拉维恩诺区的现有社区卫生工作者(CHW)队伍,以更好地满足他们所服务的客户的护理需求。所提议的干预措施是一种“家庭模式”,其中 CHW 将被重新分配到家庭,而不是具体的艾滋病毒和/或结核病(TB)患者。
本研究采用阶梯式楔形集群随机设计,旨在探讨高艾滋病毒保留率是否可复制到非传染性疾病(NCD),以及该模式对 TB 和儿科营养不良病例发现以及计划生育和产前保健的利用情况的影响。11 个地点(卫生中心和医院)被安排在六个集群中(平均集群人口 21800 人)。主要结局包括艾滋病毒和慢性 NCD 的护理保留率、TB 病例发现、儿科营养不良病例发现以及早期和完整的产前保健的利用情况。临床结局基于卫生部的地区卫生信息系统 2 和由 Partners In Health 支持的 OpenMRS 电子病历中常规收集的数据。此外,与各利益攸关方的半结构化定性访谈将评估社区对家庭模式的看法和背景。
该方案已获得马拉维利隆圭的国家卫生科学研究委员会(#16/11/1694)、马萨诸塞州萨默维尔的 Partners Healthcare 人类研究委员会(#2017P000548/PHS)和英国考文垂的生物医学和科学研究伦理小组委员会(REGO-2017-2060)的伦理批准。传播将包括同行评议出版物的手稿以及详细报告干预措施的发现,供马拉维卫生部使用。
NCT03106727。
Partners In Health | Abwenzi Pa Za Umoyo P.O. Box 56,Neno,Malawi。协议版本 4,2018 年 3 月。