Saving Babies Lives

NCT ID: NCT04663620

Last Updated: 2024-03-12

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

24040 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2018-01-01

Study Completion Date

2023-02-28

Brief Summary

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The central hypothesis of this study is that a neonatal healthcare programme that has a significant impact on neonatal mortality and which spans the healthcare journey from village to referral hospital can be developed and implemented in a low-resource rural setting.

This study is a five-year cluster-randomised trial, covering a rural and isolated province in North-Eastern Cambodia. The intervention of this study is the Saving Babies' Lives programme, which is a comprehensive, contextual and iterative neonatal healthcare package. The Saving Babies' Lives programme comprises a training programme for primary care facilities, and participatory action research with community health workers (known in Cambodia as village health support group volunteers). The control is no intervention; standard government service continues. Qualitative and quantitative data collection supports improvements in the iterative programme, and evaluation of the study, with the intention of creating a scalable blueprint.

Wellcome Trust grant number 220211.

Detailed Description

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Globally the proportion of childhood deaths that occur in the neonatal period is increasing. Since 1990 there has been a 47% reduction in deaths in children less than five years of age. However, this rate of reduction has not been seen in infants four weeks of age or younger (neonates). The reasons why the fall in neonatal mortality has not mirrored that seen in children mortality, is complex and one that is not well explored in the literature. One proposed explanation is that interventions that have been successfully employed to reduce childhood death do not reach the community and it is in the community where most neonates die. Another pervasive perceived barrier to providing neonatal care, particularly in remote and rural areas, is the misconception that neonatal care is difficult and expensive.

Many health problems are rooted in powerlessness. Health education that involves community involvement: dialogue and problem solving, rather than just message giving, is more empowering. Addressing social needs and empowering communities to make decisions about health care needs allows for the design of programmes that account for local practices and beliefs. Up to two-thirds of neonatal deaths could be prevented if neonates were given proper care during and immediately after birth, because the majority of neonatal deaths occur around the time of delivery. Training primary level health care workers to deal with emergency situations that occur around the time of delivery, has been shown to decrease maternal mortality and neonatal mortality It is reported that 79% of deliveries in Cambodia occur in healthcare facilities. The majority of these will occur at primary care facilities. Babies born in primary care facilities who require further care are transferred to the referral hospital. The majority of referral hospitals in Cambodia do not have the resources or skills to effectively deal with neonatal complications for babies born either in health centres or in their on-site maternity wards.

The central hypothesis of this study is that a neonatal healthcare programme that has a significant impact on neonatal mortality and which spans the healthcare journey from village to referral hospital can be developed and implemented in a low-resource rural setting.

This study is a five-year cluster-randomised trial, covering the whole of Preah Vihear province in North-Eastern Cambodia, which is a rural and isolated province. A cluster is defined as a primary care administrative group, as recognised by the provincial health department, and includes all primary care facilities, primary care workers, community health workers, villagers and villages in that geographical area. The study area is divided into 21 clusters. Clusters were pre-assigned to one of two arms: intervention and control. A pilot sequence has only four clusters, to incorporate a pilot phase into study design.

The intervention of this study is the Saving Babies' Lives programme which is a comprehensive, contextual and adaptive neonatal healthcare package. The Saving Babies' Lives Programme will be developed in partnership with the Kingdom of Cambodia Ministry of Health. The programme will be approved by the Ministry of Health and a memorandum of understanding signed with the provincial health director of Preah Vihear province. The control is no intervention; standard government service continues.

The primary care facility intervention component of the Saving Babies' Lives programme involves course-based training combined with continuous in-situ mentoring to support doctors, nurses and midwives and other health worker cadres to improve their practical daily skills in emergency and clinical neonatal care. Essential equipment will be identified and included in the package.

Meetings attended by community health workers (two from each of the villages) will be held to identify problems and concerns around neonatal health care in their own village. Monthly meetings will take place for the group to discuss problems, attempt to arrive at solutions, and share learning. These meetings will be facilitated by the study team who will use participatory action research methodology to: identify problems with provision of, and barriers to seeking, neonatal health care; develop interventions to improve care; implement these interventions; assess the group's perception of the effectiveness of interventions.

A neonatal healthcare assessment tool will be developed that is quantitative and qualitative in nature. It will be based on the 'KAP' survey method of analysing Knowledge, Attitudes and Practice. In addition, two further domains will be added, equipment and staffing, leading to a 'KAPES' model of assessment.

Data will be collected and used to assess the impact of the programme, its perceived facilitators and barriers and its successes and failures. This information will be used to iterate the programme content and structure in order to improve it, with the intention of creating a scalable blueprint.

Conditions

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Perinatal Mortality

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Saving Babies Lives Programme

Comprehensive neonatal healthcare package

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Saving Babies Lives Programme

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Comprehensive neonatal healthcare package

No Saving Babies Lives Programme

Control arm

Group Type PLACEBO_COMPARATOR

No Saving Babies Lives Programme

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

No comprehensive neonatal healthcare package

Interventions

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Saving Babies Lives Programme

Comprehensive neonatal healthcare package

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

No Saving Babies Lives Programme

No comprehensive neonatal healthcare package

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

• Staff members chosen by the Provincial Health Director to attend the programme


* Work as a government health care staff working in the community (Village Health Support Group Workers , (VHSG))
* Live in a village served by a chosen Health Center
* Are able to commit to attend meetings regularly
* Give consent to participate in the meetings

Exclusion Criteria

• Not applicable

Village Health Support Group Workers (VHSG) Baby Health Meetings

Study Participants

* Two Village Health Support Group Workers (VHSG) from villages served by each Health Center cluster
* Adults (aged 18 years or older)


* Refusal to participate
* Be from a village where two members have already been chosen
Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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University of Oxford

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Locations

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Angkor Hospital for Children

Siem Reap, , Cambodia

Site Status

Countries

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Cambodia

References

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Patel K, Say S, Leng D, Prak M, Lo K, Mukaka M, Riedel A, Turner C. Saving babies' lives (SBL) - a programme to reduce neonatal mortality in rural Cambodia: study protocol for a stepped-wedge cluster-randomised trial. BMC Pediatr. 2021 Sep 7;21(1):390. doi: 10.1186/s12887-021-02833-7.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 34493225 (View on PubMed)

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol

View Document

Document Type: Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Other Identifiers

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HCR17009

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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