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Family Centered Developmental Intervention on Severely Acutely Malnourished Children

H

Hasselt University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Severly Acutely Malnourished Children

Treatments

Behavioral: Play-based family centered stimulation
Other: no intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03036176
EPFPS-2010

Details and patient eligibility

About

Children with severe acute malnutrition (SAM) are at serious risks that compromise their growth and development. Studies have shown the benefits of psychosocial intervention in mitigating the negative consequences of SAM. However, such intervention studies have targeted the critical period in child development and thus focused on children under three years of age. Dietary rehabilitation is usually included as part of the intervention package. Moreover, these young children in such studies customarily obtain more care than older ones and have access to breast milk, more frequent interaction with mother and other caregivers in the family. Therefore, effects of psychosocial interventions targeting such age groups may be different for older children. Much is not known if children older than three years of benefit from similar interventions, and if family-based psychomotor/psychosocial intervention can benefit SAM children in low income contexts such as Ethiopia where access to balanced diet remains hardly possible. In Ethiopia, one of the poorest countries in the world, many children are admitted to hospital for treatment due to SAM. The nutritional rehabilitation unit at hospitals provide dietary treatment to the SAM children who are also treated for related illnesses and complications. Once discharged from hospital, however, the SAM children return to the same poor home environments with inadequate care and unbalanced diets. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of play-based family-centered psychomotor/psychosocial stimulation on linear growth, nutritional status and developmental outcomes of under-six SAM children in the Jimma Zone, south west Ethiopia. This was done by randomly assigning the SAM children admitted to Jimma University's Specialized Referral Teaching Hospital into control and intervention groups. Both groups were receiving the routine medical and dietary treatment services. The intervention group additionally received play-based psychomotor/psychosocial stimulation. Caregivers, supported by periodic visits made to their homes, continued the simulation. Measurements were taken after six months of home follow-up. It was hypothesized that the intervention would significantly improve some of the developmental skills of these children, and that the effect may be age-dependent.

Enrollment

339 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 66 months old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

SAM children who were admitted for medical treatment and nutritional rehabilitation after being confirmed by physicians to be severely acutely malnourished.

Inclusion criteria were:

  1. children between 6 to 60 months of age
  2. of Transition Phase i.e., Phase II (no medical complications) and, whose wasting was severe (weight for height or weight for length less than 70% of the median on National Centre for Health Statistics of USA; or
  3. with a low mid upper arm circumference (MUAC), i.e., less than 110 mm with a length greater than 65 cm; or,
  4. having bilateral pitting edema,

Exclusion criteria were:

SAM children

  1. who were completely deaf or blind,
  2. who had complications that hinder mobility for play,
  3. whose primary caregiver was not able to provide stimulation due to physical or mental disability,
  4. who were from far or inaccessible distance for follow-up

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

339 participants in 2 patient groups

SAM intervention group
Other group
Description:
Children in the intervention group received routine medical treatment and nutritional rehabilitation services in hospital; their primary caregivers were given basic orientations on child care, feeding and nutrition. Children attended play-based stimulation sessions in which trained nurses demonstrated caregivers on how to stimulate the SAM child using play materials and facilities at playroom and playground of the hospital. After discharge from hospital, they were followed up at home and visited three times over a period of six months. During the visits, new play materials were provided and caregivers were shown how to use them to stimulate the SAM child.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Play-based family centered stimulation
SAM control Group
Other group
Description:
The control children received routine medical treatment and nutritional rehabilitation services in hospital. Though they had access to playground facilities neither the control children nor their caregivers had access to the playroom materials and the basic orientation on child care, feeding and stimulation.
Treatment:
Other: no intervention

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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