scholarly journals Gender-transformative Bandebereho couples’ intervention to promote male engagement in reproductive and maternal health and violence prevention in Rwanda: Findings from a randomized controlled trial

PLoS ONE ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. e0192756 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kate Doyle ◽  
Ruti G. Levtov ◽  
Gary Barker ◽  
Gautam G. Bastian ◽  
Jeffrey B. Bingenheimer ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Netsanet Belete ◽  
Mulusew Gerbaba ◽  
Gurmesa Tura

Abstract Background - Maternal mortality is still high in Ethiopia. Antenatal care, use of skilled delivery and postnatal care are key maternal health care services that can significantly reduce maternal mortality. However, in low and middle income countries including Ethiopia, utilization of these key services are not enough to deliver the recommended preventive, promotive and curative services. The aim of this study is to examine the effectiveness of checklist based box system interventions on improving maternal health service utilization. Methods - A community level cluster-randomized controlled trial will be conducted to compare the effectiveness of checklist based box system interventions over the routine standard of care. The intervention will use health extension program and provided by health extension workers and midwives, using a special type of health education scheduling and service utilization monitoring boxes, placed at health posts and health centers respectively. For this, 1,200 pregnant mothers, below 16 weeks of gestation, will be recruited from 30 clusters. Suspected pregnant mothers will be identified through a community survey and linked to the nearby health center. In a two weeks base, review of dropouts will be conducted at each intervention health center. Then intervention health posts (supervised by intervention health center) will be communicated for each dropout. Then, health extension workers will provide health education, using a person-centered manual prepared for this purpose. Data will be collected using ODK-Collect and analyzed using STATA version 13.0. Data will be analyzed by intention to treat analysis. Risk ration will be computed at cluster level and the summary will be compared using t-test. Outcomes between intervention and control groups will be compared with random effects logistic regression models. Discussion - The authors of this study expect that, the study will generate evidence on the effectiveness of checklist based box system interventions on improving utilization of maternal health care service, that are strong enough to inform policies in the country.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 205520762098629
Author(s):  
Angella Musiimenta ◽  
Wilson Tumuhimbise ◽  
Niels Pinkwart ◽  
Jane Katusiime ◽  
Godfrey Mugyenyi ◽  
...  

Background Uganda’s maternal mortality rate remains unacceptably high. Mobile phones can potentially provide affordable means of accessing maternal health services even among the otherwise hard-to-reach populations. Evidence about the acceptability and feasibility of mobile phone-based interventions targeting illiterate women, however, is limited. Objective To assess the acceptability and feasibility of a mobile phone-based multimedia application (MatHealth app) to support maternal health amongst illiterate pregnant women in rural southwestern Uganda. Methods 80 pregnant women initiating antenatal care from Mbarara regional referral hospital were enrolled in a pilot randomized controlled trial and followed until six weeks after delivery. The 40 women in the intervention group received a MatHealth app composed of educational videos/audios, clinic appointment reminders, and the calling function. Qualitative interviews on acceptability of this technology were carried out with 30 of the intervention participants. An inductive, content analytic approach was used to analyze qualitative data. Quantitative feasibility data were recorded and summarized descriptively. Results Participants reported that the intervention is acceptable as it enabled them adopt good maternal health practices, enhanced social support from spouses, provided clinic appointment reminders, and facilitated communication with healthcare providers. Challenges included: phone sharing (74%), accidental deletion of the application 15 (43%), lack of electricity 15 (43%), and inability to set up a reminder function 20 (57%). Conclusion The MatHealth app is an acceptable and feasible intervention among illiterate women, in a resource limited setting. Future efforts should focus on optimized application design, spouse orientation, and incorporating economic support to overcome the challenges we encountered.


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