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Self-management of medical abortion (MA) pills purchased from pharmacies is considered to be one of the reasons behind falling morbidity and mortality from unsafe abortion in recent years. While pharmacy workers commonly sell MA medications over the counter, they have inadequate knowledge about how women should take the medications and their potential complications, and do not offer adequate information and counselling to women buying the drugs. This study aims to evaluate if a pharmacy-based intervention to promote use of a support hotline (Marie Stopes Zambia (MSZ) call centre) among MA purchasers can increase use of the call centre, and to assess whether correct MA use and acceptability of self- administered MA is higher among MA users who contact the call centre than those who self-administer MA without call centre support.
Full description
Self-management of medical abortion (MA) pills purchased from pharmacies is considered to be one of the reasons behind falling morbidity and mortality from unsafe abortion in recent years. While pharmacy workers commonly sell MA medications over the counter, they have inadequate knowledge about how women should take the medications and their potential complications, and do not offer adequate information and counselling to women buying the drugs.
This study aims to evaluate if a pharmacy-based intervention to promote use of a support hotline (Marie Stopes Zambia (MSZ) call centre) among MA purchasers can increase use of the call centre, and to assess whether correct MA use and acceptability of self- administered MA is higher among MA users who contact the call centre than those who self-administer MA without call centre support.
The objectives of the study are:
The details of the programme intervention will be finalised following an intervention design workshop but the main components will be as follows:
Women who call the call centre will receive advice on how to take the MA medications. Call centre staff will have a script detailing essential information on MA and answers to possible client questions.
To evaluate this intervention, a two arm, single group, superiority, multicentre, cluster randomised controlled trial with a nested observational study will be conducted at 26 pharmacies in Lusaka, Zambia. A randomised trial design will be used to assess the effectiveness of the pharmacy-based intervention in increasing use of the call centre. As it is not possible to randomly assign women to actually use the call centre and use will be largely based on self-selection, the nested observational study will then compare the experience of women who use and do not use the call centre.
Data collection will include:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Pharmacies:
MA users:
Mystery clients:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1,359 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Kathryn Church, PhD; Katy A Footman, MSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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