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Benefits of a Household WASH Package to Community-based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) Program, Chad (OUADINUT)

A

Action Against Hunger

Status

Completed

Conditions

Severe Malnutrition

Treatments

Behavioral: Hygiene promotion sessions
Procedure: Outpatient Therapeutic Programme
Device: Household WASH package
Behavioral: Household visit
Behavioral: Group discussions after successful discharge

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02486523
DFI.1836-554994

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective of the research is to assess the effectiveness of adding a Household WASH component to the standard outpatient treatment of severe acute malnutrition.

Study design: cluster-randomized controlled trial comparing two interventions:

  1. Control group: outpatient management of children diagnosed for severe acute malnutrition only
  2. Intervention group: outpatient management of children diagnosed for severe acute malnutrition + "household WASH package"

2000 children, aged between 6 and 59 months, admitted to 20 OTP (Outpatient Therapeutic Program) centers for SAM will be included into the study and followed for 8 months (2 months of treatment, and 6 months after successful discharge).

Full description

The Action Contre la Faim (ACF) nutrition project in Kanem started in 2008, and now is set up in 35 health facilities divided across 2 health districts: Mao and Mondo. The management of severe acute malnutrition is done in both OTP (Outpatient Therapeutic Programme) and in TFC (Therapeutic Feeding Center). Between the treatment of SAM in OTPs and TFCs, and the number of curative consultations, the total number of beneficiaries is expected to be 45,065 in 2014 (without double counting).

Clear evidence exists that some Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) interventions can successfully prevent diarrhea. For instance, interventions aiming at improving water quality at household level or at promoting hand washing with soap do reduce significantly diarrhea incidence. Estimations showed that WASH interventions have a small but measurable benefit on length growth, but not on weight or weight/height. Yet, to our knowledge, no impact of WASH interventions has been assessed, neither during nutritional rehabilitation where children are particularly vulnerable to infections, nor after discharge where immune recovery is still incomplete.

In the context of nutritional rehabilitation of SAM (Severe Acute Malnutrition), the investigators hypothesize that improving water quality and hygiene-related care practices at household level would decrease incidence of WASH-related infections, such as diarrhea, nematode and environmental enteropathy. As such, it would improve weight gain, decrease relapses after successful discharge, and overall, could decrease over time the incidence of acute malnutrition in the community.

The proposed WASH intervention will be added to already existing nutritional activities and it will include: i/ Household water treatment and hygiene kit (water container, water disinfection consumables, soap, cup, hygiene promotion leaflet) provided at beginning of SAM treatment; ii/ sessions of Hygiene promotion provided weekly at health center level iii/ Household visits and hygiene sessions made during the treatment; // group discussion on hygiene and care practices made with mother at community level after successful discharge.

Enrollment

1,572 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 59 months old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children aged between 6 to 59 months

  • New admission:

    • Weight for Height Z-score (WHZ) < -3 (WHO2006) or
    • MUAC <115 mm or
    • Presence of bilateral oedema (+ or ++ at OTP admission)
  • Other admission:

    • Relapse: after a successful discharge or ≥ 2 months since last visit
    • Re-admission: defaulter < 2 months since last visit
    • Transfer from a stabilization center (SC)
  • Caretakers' agreement to participate (through an informed consent)

Exclusion criteria

  • Signs of medical complications requiring inpatient management,
  • Bilateral oedema (+++),
  • Transfer from another OTP: treatment already started and child has a identification number (ID) for SAM
  • Refusal of caretaker to participate
  • Children from families outside the health center coverage

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

1,572 participants in 2 patient groups

Control group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Outpatient management of children diagnosed with severe acute malnutrition. Interventions allocated: Behavioral: Group discussions after successful discharge Procedure/Surgery: Outpatient Therapeutic Programme
Treatment:
Procedure: Outpatient Therapeutic Programme
Behavioral: Group discussions after successful discharge
Intervention group
Experimental group
Description:
Outpatient management of children diagnosed with severe acute malnutrition + "household WASH package" Interventions allocated: Behavioral: Hygiene promotion sessions Device: Household WASH package The content of the kit: soap and aquatab for 3 months, 20 liters Jerry can, a cup, a plastic kettle for hand washing and the instructions leaflet. Behavioral: Household visits during the OTP phase Behavioral: Group discussions after successful discharge Procedure/Surgery: Outpatient Therapeutic Programme
Treatment:
Device: Household WASH package
Procedure: Outpatient Therapeutic Programme
Behavioral: Group discussions after successful discharge
Behavioral: Hygiene promotion sessions
Behavioral: Household visit

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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