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An effectiveness-implementation hybrid type 1 trial assessing the impact of group versus individual antenatal care on maternal and infant outcomes in Malawi

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posted on 2022-02-03, 16:31 authored by Ellen Chirwa, Esnath Kapito, Diana L Jere, Ursula Kafulafula, Elizabeth Chodzaza, Genesis Chorwe-Sungani, Ashley Gresh, Li Liu, Elizabeth T Abrams, Carrie KlimaCarrie Klima, Linda McCrearyLinda McCreary, Kathleen NorrKathleen Norr, Crystal PatilCrystal Patil
BACKGROUND: Sub-Saharan Africa has the world's highest rates of maternal and perinatal mortality and accounts for two-thirds of new HIV infections and 25% of preterm births. Antenatal care, as the entry point into the health system for many women, offers an opportunity to provide life-saving monitoring, health promotion, and health system linkages. Change is urgently needed, because potential benefits of antenatal care are not realized when pregnant women experience long wait times and short visits with inconsistent provisioning of essential services and minimal health promotion, especially for HIV prevention. This study answers WHO's call for the rigorous study of group antenatal care as a transformative model that provides a positive pregnancy experience and improves outcomes. METHODS: Using a hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation design, we test the effectiveness of group antenatal care by comparing it to individual care across 6 clinics in Blantyre District, Malawi. Our first aim is to evaluate the effectiveness of group antenatal care through 6 months postpartum. We hypothesize that women in group care and their infants will have less morbidity and mortality and more positive HIV prevention outcomes. We will test hypotheses using multi-level hierarchical models using data from repeated surveys (four time points) and health records. Guided by the consolidated framework for implementation research, our second aim is to identify contextual factors related to clinic-level degree of implementation success. Analyses use within and across-case matrices. DISCUSSION: This high-impact study addresses three global health priorities, including maternal and infant mortality, HIV prevention, and improved quality of antenatal care. Results will provide rigorous evidence documenting the effectiveness and scalability of group antenatal care. If results are negative, governments will avoid spending on less effective care. If our study shows positive health impacts in Malawi, the results will provide strong evidence and valuable lessons learned for widespread scale-up in other low-resource settings. Positive maternal, neonatal, and HIV-related outcomes will save lives, impact the quality of antenatal care, and influence health policy as governments make decisions about whether to adopt this innovative healthcare model. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov registration number NCT03673709. Registered on September 17, 2018.

Funding

Group Antenatal Care: Effectiveness for Maternal/Infant and HIV Prevention Outcomes and Contextual Factors Linked to Implementation Success in Malawi | Funder: National Institutes of Health (National Institute of Nursing Research) | Grant ID: R01NR018115

Integrating HIV with Innovative Group Anetenatal Care in Two African Countries | Funder: National Institutes of Health (National Institute of Nursing Research) | Grant ID: R21NR014413

A Community-based Implementation Model for HIV Prevention and Testing in Malawi | Funder: National Institutes of Health (National Institute of Nursing Research) | Grant ID: R01NR015409

Acupuncture for Adults with Sickle Cell Disease: A Feasibility Study | Funder: Self-funded

Hybrid Effectiveness-Implementation Trial of Meditation and Acupuncture for Chronic Sickle Cell Pain | Funder: national institute of minority health and health disparities

Community "Centering" and Empowerment: The Road to Reducing HIV and STIs among Chicago's Sex Worker Community | Funder: Rita & Alex Hillman Foundation

Faculty Fellowship | Funder: Institute for Research on Race and Public Policy

Internal Research Support Program | Funder: University of Illinois, College of Nursing

Migration, Marriage, and Maternal Risk in Tajikistan | Funder: Wenner-Gren Fdn

Diet, Environment, & Choices of positive living (DECIDE study): Evaluating personal & external food environment influences on diets among PLHIV & families in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania | Funder: Purdue University

Hybrid Effectiveness-Implementation Trial of Guided Relaxation and Acupuncture for Chronic Sickle Cell Disease Pain | Funder: National Institutes of Health (National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health) | Grant ID: UG3AT011265

Migration, Marriage and Maternal Risk in Tajikistan | Funder: Wenner-Gren Foundation

History

Citation

Chirwa, E., Kapito, E., Jere, D. L., Kafulafula, U., Chodzaza, E., Chorwe-Sungani, G., Gresh, A., Liu, L., Abrams, E. T., Klima, C. S., McCreary, L. L., Norr, K. F.Patil, C. L. (2020). An effectiveness-implementation hybrid type 1 trial assessing the impact of group versus individual antenatal care on maternal and infant outcomes in Malawi. BMC Public Health, 20(1), 205-. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-8276-x

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Language

  • en

issn

1472-698X