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This evaluation will be conducted in ten countries involved in the Catalyzing Pediatric TB Innovation (CaP-TB) project: Cameroon, Cote D'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda, Zimbabwe and India. The CaP-TB project is a project designed to use innovative methods and capacity building to strengthen the health systems of developing countries in terms of pediatric TB case detection, early accurate diagnosis and effective treatment. This project is funded by Unitaid and is implemented by Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation.
EGPAF proposes to evaluate the implementation of CaP-TB in up to 450 sites in ten participating countries. This evaluation will assess the effects of CaP-TB innovative interventions on selected service delivery outcomes as compared to routine TB program in a sub-set of project sites in the ten countries.
Full description
This pre-post quasi-experimental evaluation study will be conducted in ten countries involved in the Catalyzing Pediatric TB Innovation (CaP-TB) project: Cameroon, Cote D'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda, Zimbabwe and India. The CaP-TB project is a project designed to use innovative methods and capacity building to strengthen the health systems of developing countries in terms of pediatric TB case detection, early accurate diagnosis and effective treatment. This project is funded by Unitaid headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland and is implemented by Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF) with headquarters in Washington, D.C. and Geneva and 10 country offices. This study will assess the effects of CaP-TB innovative interventions on selected service delivery outcomes as compared to routine TB program in a sub-set of project sites in ten countries.
The CaP TB project is a 4-year (October 1, 2017-September 30, 2021) Unitaid-funded project to improve pediatric TB outcomes by introducing integrated and decentralized models of pediatric TB care and strengthening access to WHO-recommended drugs and diagnostics. Integration refers to supporting TB activities, such as screening and TB sample collection for children, into non-TB health care services, such as general pediatric outpatient clinics. Decentralization refers to moving pediatric TB services from higher levels of health clinics to lower levels.
Objectives of the study
To evaluate the CaP TB project on the below TB service indicators and clinical outcomes for children 0-14 in facilities implementing the CaP TB project:
Study data
Pre-intervention retrospective data collection
Under the standard of care condition (baseline), the investigators will:
After the implementation of the CaP TB project, prospective data will be collected by project-specific data collection tools and/or from existing registers. Whenever possible, the CaP TB data collection will use existing site level data collection tools to gather the data for the project.
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Exclusion criteria
• All pediatric TB patients who enter CaP TB project site in any of the 10 countries and who are above 15 years old
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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