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Adaptation and Evaluation of the PMTCT CSC in Dedza and Ntcheu Districts, Malawi

E

Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation

Status

Completed

Conditions

HIV/AIDS
Infant Morbidity

Treatments

Behavioral: Community score card approach

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This CDC-funded study sought to evaluate the effect of an adapted Community Score Card Approach on maternal retention in ART, maternal retention across the PMTCT service cascade, and the uptake of early infant diagnosis services in Malawi. The study also estimated the cost of the implementation of the Community Score Card Approach.

Full description

Prevention of Mother to Child HIV Transmission (PMTCT) services aim to identify HIV-infected pregnant and breastfeeding mothers and initiate them on antiretroviral treatment (ART) for improving the health of the mother as well as reducing HIV transmission to their infants. In 2011, Malawi was the first country to adopt lifelong ART for HIV- pregnant and breastfeeding women, known as 'Option B+'. Despite leading the way on operationalization of this approach, Malawi has faced challenges retaining HIV-infected pregnant and breastfeeding women on lifelong ART as well as with improving uptake of early infant HIV testing for HIV-exposed infants. Innovative approaches are needed which engage health service users (i.e. patients) as part of quality improvement solutions within clinical settings to improve retention throughout the PMTCT cascade and ultimately improve PMTCT outcomes for mothers and infants.

One approach to broadly engage health service users in quality improvement activities is the Community Score Card (CSC). The CSC engages both service providers and users within a clinical setting in dialogues to identify solutions to the perceived barriers with health service delivery and utilization.

CARE developed the CSC intervention in Malawi in 2002 as part of a project aimed at developing innovative and sustainable models to improve general maternal and child health services. The main goal of the CSC intervention is to positively influence the quality, efficiency, and accountability with which health services are provided at different levels. The original CSC consists of five core phases, repeated on a regular basis (called "rounds"), for the life of the project.

This project adapted the CSC to the PMTCT setting across 11 sites in two priority PEPFAR scale-up districts in Malawi. The adaptation of the CSC was evaluated through a pre-post design to measure change in maternal retention on ART, change in maternal retention across the PMTCT service cascade, and uptake of Early Infant Diagnosis (EID) services following CSC implementation. Additionally, the project estimated the cost of the adapted CSC implementation.

Enrollment

1,233 patients

Sex

Female

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • New born infants of HIV-positive women
  • Women 18 years and over newly initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) at ART clinic
  • HIV-positive pregnant women >15 years of age newly receiving care at first ANC (ANC1)
  • Women who are HIV-positive at ANC1 (known positive, already on treatment)
  • Women who are newly identified HIV-positive and initiated on treatment at ANC (newly identified at ANC or labor and delivery)
  • Women known HIV-positive but not yet on treatment prior to enrollment at ANC and initiated on treatment at ANC

Exclusion criteria

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

1,233 participants in 1 patient group

Post intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Community score card approach
Treatment:
Behavioral: Community score card approach

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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