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Effect of Community-Based Interventions on Increasing Family Planning Utilization in Pastoralist Community

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Family Size
Interventions
Behavioral: Women Education
Other: Control group
Behavioral: Male Involvement
Registration Number
NCT03450564
Lead Sponsor
Mekelle University
Brief Summary

The cluster randomized controlled trial was done in Pastoralist community of Afar region, Ethiopia for a total of nine months. There was three arms in the study. The type of randomization will be a cluster randomized controlled trial where kebele are randomized to two different interventions and control groups. These interventions are women education to use family planning and male education/involvement to enhance family planning use in the community.

Detailed Description

The study hypothesized that doing on women education and men education/involvement in family planning utilization would be a practical way to achieve for an increment of family planning utilization in Pastoralist community of Afar region. The study was carried out in Afar region, North Eastern Ethiopia from Jan1, 2018, to September 5, 2018. A three-arm, parallel randomized controlled trial was used to answer the objective of the study. The type of randomization will be a cluster randomized controlled trial where kebele are randomized to two different interventions and one control groups together. These interventions are women education to use family planning and male education/involvement to enhance family planning use in the community.

The unit of randomization was clustered which are kebeles in a different districts. From a given district 11 Kebele were selected randomly gives a total of 33 kebele. The 33 cluster were allocated to the 2 interventions and one control arms. The detail description of the two interventions and one control arm is described below.

* Arm 1): existing standard family planning service provision by the government health sectors.

* Arm 2): It focuses on the involvement of men to enhance the utilization of family planning by their wives and educating the women in the male intervention area.

* Arm 3): It deals with educating married women to use family planning.

Data collection tool, procedures, and follow-up We develop the quantitative tool based on the previous finding in the region. It contains baseline and end line data collection with a nine-month duration. The tool was piloted on 10% (118) of the sample and it was tested for reliability and validity test for items of of knowledge, attitude, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control over FP use, intention to use for FP and male involvement. Accordingly, modification was made based on the finding of reliability and validity test. A tool which has a All items were subjected to exploratory factor analysis to identify the relevant constructs. Items with low load factor (less than 0.3) to the identified constructs were deleted. Then the reliability test was done to assess the consistency of items in each construct (Cronbach's Alpha \> 0.7). At the end, a final tool was prepared based on the finding of the reliability and validity test. Then, it was pretested in 5% (45) of the sample. 6 clinical nurse data collectors and 2 supervisors were used to collect the data after they got training on the items and how to use mobile based application. They were assigned to a different cluster of a given district. The data was collected using mobile based application called open data kit (ODK) for a one month. A similar procedure was used in the end line data collection. Immediately after the data checked for its completeness, it was sent to the Mekelle University (MU) Server. Hence, at the middle of the intervention, qualitative data was collected to identify the participants acceptability and documenting best experience of the intervention.

Intervention description:

The community-based intervention in this study includes two components. These are educating women to use family planning and male involvement for use of family planning.

Analysis plan and statistics methods The type of data used in the intervention study was a repeated cross-sectional. The data collected using ODK, was exported to R software version 3.4.2 for analysis.Intention to treat analysis was used as a framework of analysis. All the analysis was used with 95% confidence interval and p-value \<0.05 to declared statistically significant. Since the number of clusters per arm was 11, a cluster level summary was used to compare the control group with the intervention (women education and male involvement). A separate cluster level summaries analysis was done for control Vs the women arm and control with the male arm by considering the effect of cluster. Finally, the result was described with t-test, df, P-value, mean value of both group and 95% CI of the adjusted risk. Moreover, prevalence ratio of the end line FP user over the baseline FP was done.

Ethical consideration Permission to undertake the study was obtained from Mekelle University College of Health Sciences institutional review board with a reference number ERC 1435/2018. And an official letter of cooperation was given to Afar Regional Health Bureau. Permission was obtained from all relevant authorities in the Afar regional health bureau and participating district health offices (Afambo, Kori and Mille). At the beginning community consent was secured from the influential group (religious and clan leader). Verbal consent was secured before conducting interviews and parental/guardian consent was waived to include the minors to the study by the ethical board. The informed consent was secured continuously every three months. A one-page consent letter was attached to the cover page of each questionnaire as an information sheet which includes a detail description about the benefit and risk of participating in the study, participation is on voluntary basis, the right to withdraw from the study, identification of informant was possible only through specific identification numbers and the privacy of collected information. Data collection was conducted through electronically smartphone mobile based application (ODK) and it was confidentially.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
891
Inclusion Criteria
  • A household was considered eligible for the study if the following criteria are met:

    • at least one married women with reproductive age group (15-49) year's child
    • able to provide a consent and voluntary to participate in the study
    • Cluster which has more than 30 married women. A household was excluded if the woman or her husband will not volunteer to participate in the study.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Married women who are not volunteer to provide informed consent
  • Married women who are declared infertile

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Women EducationWomen EducationIn the married women arm there was an intervention with health education provision based on the baseline finding so as to fill the gap.Faema leader and video from (role model women who start to use FP, FP experts was used.Health extension workers were responsible in assisting the faema leader. Twice a month there was a provision of health education message about family planning for a total of 9 months.
Control groupControl groupThe third arm in this community-based intervention was following the community without provision of male and married women education. In this arm, there was no intervention by the researchers. However, the activities performed by the government about family planning provision was maintained.
Male InvolvementMale InvolvementIn the married women arm there was an intervention with health education provision based on the baseline finding so as to fill the gap.Faema leader and video from (role model women who start to use FP, model who allows his wife to use FP, religious leader, FP experts was used.Health extension workers were responsible in assisting the faema leader. Twice a month there was a provision of health education message about family planning for a total of 9 months.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Family planning utilization9 months

the family planning utilization will be assessed by asking the participant either use or not use of contraceptive during data collection.Both the ever use or current use of the family planning will be collected from the married women.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Intention to use family planning9 months

A total of 9 items which has a natural ascending order was used. The items includes the following points. I am not clear with the benefits of using family planning , at this moment, I can list some of the benefits of family planning use I would gain if I use it, I am happy if I could use family planning to space the number of children I would have in the future, I am willing to use family planning to space/limit number of children, I have already decided that I should use family planning in the near future, I have ever used family planning in the previous 6 months and I found it relevant me, I have ever used FP in the past 6 months and I am quite sure I will continue using it in the future and It is expected that women in our community should use family planning and so do I.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Afar Region

🇪🇹

Semera, Zone 1, Ethiopia

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