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SToP(观察、治疗、预防)皮肤溃疡和疥疮试验:西澳大利亚偏远地区皮肤病控制整群随机阶梯楔形试验的研究方案

SToP (See, Treat, Prevent) skin sores and scabies trial: study protocol for a cluster randomised, stepped-wedge trial for skin disease control in remote Western Australia.

作者信息

Mullane Marianne J, Barnett Timothy C, Cannon Jeffrey W, Carapetis Jonathan R, Christophers Ray, Coffin Juli, Jones Mark A, Marsh Julie A, Mc Loughlin Frieda, O'Donnell Vicki, Pavlos Rebecca, Smith Bec, Steer Andrew C, Tong Steven Y C, Walker Roz, Bowen Asha C

机构信息

Wesfarmers Centre for Vaccines and Infectious Diseases, Telethon Kids Institute, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, Western Australia, Australia.

Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia.

出版信息

BMJ Open. 2019 Sep 24;9(9):e030635. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030635.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Skin is important in Australian Aboriginal culture informing kinship and identity. In many remote Aboriginal communities, scabies and impetigo are very common. Untreated skin infections are painful, itchy and frequently go untreated due to under-recognition and lack of awareness of their potential serious complications. We hypothesise that the skin infection burden in remote Aboriginal communities can be reduced by implementing streamlined training and treatment pathways integrated with environmental health and health promotion activities, tested in the See, Treat, Prevent (SToP skin sores and scabies) trial.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS

SToP will evaluate a skin control programme using a stepped-wedge, cluster randomised trial design with three intervention components (the 'SToP activities'): (1) seeing skin infections (development of training resources implemented within a community dermatology model); (2) treating skin infections (employing the latest evidence for impetigo, and scabies treatment); and (3) preventing skin infections (embedded, culturally informed health promotion and environmental health activities). Four community clusters in the remote Kimberley region of Western Australia will participate. Following baseline data collection, two clusters will be randomly allocated to the SToP activities. At 12 months, the remaining two clusters will transition to the SToP activities. The primary outcome is the diagnosis of impetigo in children (5-9 years) at school-based surveillance. Secondary outcome measures include scabies diagnosis, other child health indicators, resistance to cotrimoxazole in circulating pathogenic bacteria, determining the economic burden of skin disease and evaluating the cost effectiveness of SToP activities.

ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION

This study protocol was approved by the health ethics review committees at the Child and Adolescent Health Service (Approval number RGS0000000584), the Western Australian Aboriginal Health Ethics Committee (Reference number: 819) and the University of Western Australia (Reference RA/4/20/4123). Study findings will be shared with community members, academic and medical communities via publications and presentations, and in reports to funders. Authorship for all publications based on this study will be determined in line with the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals published by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. Sharing results with organisations and communities who contributed to the study is paramount. The results of the SToP trial will be shared with participants in a suitable format, such as a single summary page provided to participants or presentations to communities, the Kimberly Aboriginal Health Planning Forum Research Subcommittee and other stakeholders as appropriate and as requested. Communication and dissemination will require ongoing consultation with Aboriginal communities to determine appropriate formats.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER

ACTRN12618000520235.

摘要

引言

在澳大利亚原住民文化中,皮肤对于确定亲属关系和身份至关重要。在许多偏远的原住民社区,疥疮和脓疱病非常常见。未经治疗的皮肤感染会引起疼痛、瘙痒,并且由于认识不足和对其潜在严重并发症缺乏了解,常常得不到治疗。我们假设,通过实施与环境卫生和健康促进活动相结合的简化培训和治疗途径,可以减轻偏远原住民社区的皮肤感染负担,这在“观察、治疗、预防(SToP皮肤溃疡和疥疮)”试验中得到了验证。

方法与分析

SToP将采用阶梯楔形整群随机试验设计评估一项皮肤控制计划,该计划包含三个干预组成部分(“SToP活动”):(1)观察皮肤感染(在社区皮肤病学模式下开发培训资源);(2)治疗皮肤感染(采用脓疱病和疥疮治疗的最新证据);(3)预防皮肤感染(融入具有文化特色的健康促进和环境卫生活动)。西澳大利亚偏远金伯利地区的四个社区群组将参与。在收集基线数据后,两个群组将被随机分配接受SToP活动。12个月后,其余两个群组将过渡到SToP活动。主要结局是在学校监测中对5至9岁儿童脓疱病的诊断。次要结局指标包括疥疮诊断、其他儿童健康指标、循环致病细菌对复方新诺明的耐药性、确定皮肤病的经济负担以及评估SToP活动的成本效益。

伦理与传播

本研究方案已获得儿童与青少年健康服务机构健康伦理审查委员会(批准号RGS0000000584)、西澳大利亚原住民健康伦理委员会(参考号:819)以及西澳大利亚大学(参考号RA/4/20/4123)的批准。研究结果将通过出版物、报告以及向资助者汇报等方式,与社区成员、学术和医学团体分享。基于本研究的所有出版物的作者身份将根据国际医学期刊编辑委员会发布的《向生物医学期刊投稿的统一要求》来确定。与为该研究做出贡献的组织和社区分享结果至关重要。SToP试验的结果将以合适的形式与参与者分享,例如向参与者提供单页总结或向社区、金伯利原住民健康规划论坛研究小组委员会及其他利益相关者进行汇报(视情况和需求而定)。沟通和传播需要与原住民社区持续协商以确定合适的形式。

试验注册号

ACTRN12618000520235。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2b77/6773324/2c2e7e58a06f/bmjopen-2019-030635f01.jpg

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