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Impact of eHealth Education to Reduce Anemia Among School-going Adolescent Girls in Rural Bangladesh

H

Hiroshima University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Anemia

Treatments

Behavioral: eHealth education

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05185661
2021/OR-NSU/IRB/1102

Details and patient eligibility

About

Adolescent girls are the highly vulnerable group to develop anemia due to reproductive immaturities, poor personal hygiene, lack of nutritional intake, and lack of health education in the rural area of Bangladesh. Rapid advantage of technology, eHealth is the promising tool to overcome the barriers and provide appropriate health guidelines in distant rural communities by developing knowledge, attitude, and practice to reduce anemia and mitigate risk among the school-going adolescent girls. This research aims (1) To evaluate eHealth education's impact on reducing anemia among adolescent girls in rural Bangladesh. (2) To assess the effect of eHealth education to change the knowledge, attitude, and practice among adolescent girls regarding anemia. A Randomized Control Trial study will be conducted from May 22, 2022, to January 21, 2023, in the two schools at the Chandpur district, Bangladesh. During the 8th months' intervention, will be provided eHealth education by the trained community health worker. The participant will be allocated who will be diagnosed as anemic through the blood hemoglobin screening. The sample size was calculated, and the total sample is 138. In this study, one school will be considered an intervention group and another school control group through the simple coin toss randomization technique. Then random sampling technique will be used to select study participants.

Full description

Globally 1.62 billion people affect anemia, a significant public health threat, especially in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). The prevalence of anemia among non-pregnant and school-going is 30% and 25%, respectively, and 35% of this anemia in the LMICs. Anemia is a medical condition that can develop at any life stage, but at the reproductive age of women, adolescent girls (10-19 years), and growing children are susceptible. Adolescent age is a critical period of developmental transmission and reproductive maturation, requiring increased nutritional intake and proper health education; otherwise, it leads adolescents more vulnerable to future development. The primary reasons for developing anemia are the lack of iron-containing food intake, contaminated water, and poor sanitation. Also, the infection with soil-transmitted helminth is one of the leading blood losses causes of anemia.

Bangladesh is a middle-income, highly populated developing country. As per World Health Organization (WHO) 2019 data, Bangladesh has a 36.7% anemia prevalence among women of reproductive age. According to the WHO, if anemia prevalence is more than 40%, it is an alarming and severe public health problem. The whole-population anemia prevalence satisfies the criteria apparently; however, focusing on sub-population, it does not. For example, among the non-pregnant women's anemia, 73% live in rural Bangladesh. A scientific article reported that 51.6% of adolescent girls were suffering from anemia; 46%, 5.4%, and 0.2% were mild, moderate, severe anemia, respectively. Due to the high prevalence of rural women and adolescent girls' anemia in Bangladesh, adolescents are the highly venerable and more focused group. The lack of education, shortage of iron intake, poor economic status, poor personal hygiene, unhygienic toilets, parasitic infection are the main risk factors of anemia in Bangladesh. Proper interventions, including health education, should be provided to those vulnerable populations. i.e., adolescent girls in rural areas.

Lifestyle and behavioral change depend on knowledge, and nutritional knowledge is essential for good dietary habits. Health education is an effective way to increase knowledge. A school-based nutritional education reported that it is a feasible tool improving the hemoglobin level, knowledge, attitudes, and practices among adolescents. Health education is a useful approach to creating awareness among adolescent girls to reduce preventable diseases like anemia and build a future healthy mother.

In Bangladesh, mobile phone (85%) and network (99%) coverage are high among the rural communities, which is effective in delivering health education through eHealth technology. eHealth is the cost-effective and secure use of information and communications technologies supporting health and health-related fields, including health-care services, health surveillance, health literature, and health education, knowledge, and research (WHO E-Health Resolution 2005). mHealth is an important part of eHealth, which is the use of mobile and wireless technologies to support the achievement of health objectives and is viewed as having the potential to transform the face of health service delivery.

To investigators' knowledge, specific research is lacking about the effect of eHealth education among adolescent girls to create awareness and knowledge about the preventive, control, and risk reduction strategies of anemia in the school-going adolescent girls of rural Bangladesh. Moreover, knowledge gaps still exist regarding food habits and dietary practice, hygiene maintenance, lifestyle and behavior, medication adherence, etc., which are important factors developing anemia.

Knowledge gap:

To investigators' knowledge, specific research is lacking about the effect of eHealth education among adolescent girls to create awareness and knowledge about the preventive, control, and risk reduction strategies of anemia in the school-going adolescent girls of rural Bangladesh. Moreover, knowledge gaps still exist regarding food habits and dietary practice, hygiene maintenance, lifestyle and behavior, medication adherence, etc., which are important factors developing anemia.

Enrollment

138 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

10 to 19 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Who is diagnosed with mild and moderate anemia in the baseline screening of the study.
  2. Who gives written consent to participate in the study through the legal guardian/participants.
  3. Who is living and studying Chandpur district with assigned school for the study.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Participants whose guardians/participants do not have a mobile phone will be excluded from the study.

  2. Who is pregnant will be excluded from our study.

  3. Who are physically and mentally sick will be excluded from our study.

  4. Disagree to participate in this study

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

138 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Group
Experimental group
Description:
1. Two surveys: Demographic, lifestyle, hygiene-related (1) \& knowledge, attitude, and practice (2) regarding anemia at baseline and end line of study. 2. Investigations and physical examination will perform for CBC blood test except ESR, urine R/E, stool R/E, Height, weight for BMI, waist circumference, hip circumference, hip - waist ratio, and mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) at baseline, mid-line, and end-line of study.
Treatment:
Behavioral: eHealth education
Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
1. Two surveys: Demographic, lifestyle, hygiene-related (1) \& knowledge, attitude, and practice (2) regarding anemia at baseline and end line of study. 2. Investigations and physical examination will perform for CBC blood test except ESR, urine R/E, stool R/E, Height, weight for BMI, waist circumference, hip circumference, hip - waist ratio, and mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) at baseline, mid-line, and end-line of study.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Mohammad Delwer Hossain Hawlader, PhD; Md Jiaur Rahman

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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