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The project rolls out combined innovative low-tech thermotherapy with heat packs and WHO recommended wound management in a Buruli ulcer (BU)-endemic district of West Africa. It addresses three key areas of considerable clinical and public health importance in the region:
Operational endpoints are
The project is embedded into a stable multidisciplinary working environment at Côte d'Ivoire, including an HDSS with a longstanding record of partnership and successful community-based operational research.
The project builds on the principles laid out by the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Universal Health Coverage (UHC) and
Full description
Overall goal of the study To contribute to a better understanding of the clinical epidemiology of wounds and wound healing and to improve wound management in settings with limited resources at the community level, the primary and secondary level of the health care services.
Study objectives Main study
To measure the proportion of wounds healed (defined as wound closed) at each cycle of clinical diagnosis and the corresponding presumptive treatment
To describe the clinical epidemiology of wounds presented (presumptive clinical and confirmed diagnoses)
Coverage and quality of wound management training of health care personnel at the peripheral health care level (health posts); Substudy 1
To measure the effectiveness and acceptability of thermotherapy of patients with early BU (< 2cm) treated at health post level with the following outcomes:
To measure the frequency and the severity of skin lesions (broken skin barrier) in the community and the health services
To investigate the determining factors of community and health services-based wound management
To measure the impact of the wound management intervention (main study and substudy 1) on the frequency, spectrum and severity of wounds including systemic complications in the community and at the 7 health posts / district hospital (HDSS-based) compared to the baseline study before the intervention and over time after the implementation of the intervention.
Target Population The target population are approximately 43,000 people of the Taabo HDSS which is surveyed longitudinally for key demographic, health and socioeconomic indicators since 2008. This provides ideal conditions to implement the intervention and assess the impact through operational endpoints. The health centres and the district hospital involved are part of the public health system. There is one district hospital and the seven health posts within the Taabo DHSS.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Survey All HDSS population members Wound management study Patients with wounds defined as broken skin barrier. Thermotherapy study Buruli ulcer patients of the main study with ulcers < 2cm.
Exclusion criteria
none
5,000 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Thomas Junghanss, MD; Bassirou Bonfoh, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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