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Clinical Trials/NCT02059863
NCT02059863
Unknown
N/A

SPRING (for the Millennium Development Goals): Sustainable Programme Incorporating Nutrition and Games (for Maximising Development, Growth and Survival)

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine2 sites in 2 countries12,000 target enrollmentMarch 2014

Overview

Phase
N/A
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Growth; Stunting, Nutritional
Sponsor
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
Enrollment
12000
Locations
2
Primary Endpoint
infant mortality
Last Updated
8 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

A large number of children in developing countries lack access to known effective interventions. Almost 9 million die each year before reaching their fifth birthday, and over 200 million children who survive fail to achieve their full growth or developmental potential, trapping them in a cycle of continuing disadvantage. The goal of "SPRING", Sustainable Programme Incorporating Nutrition and Games, is to develop an innovative approach to close this access gap, in two of the worst affected countries India and Pakistan, using community based agents. Extensive formative research will be carried out to help ensure that the content and approach of the "SPRING" intervention is feasible, acceptable and appropriately targeted. Findings will be reviewed at an intervention development workshop with local and international stakeholders and experts, and the agreed intervention piloted with a few community based agents and their supervisors. Cluster randomised controlled trials will be carried out in each setting to evaluate the impact of "SPRING" on child growth, development and survival. The programme will include process and economic evaluations to provide information on the total cost of the intervention and its cost effectiveness, as well as development of a framework with lessons learned for implementing "SPRING" in other settings.

Detailed Description

The goal of "SPRING", Sustainable Programme Incorporating Nutrition and Games, is to develop an innovative, feasible, affordable and sustainable community based approach that can achieve delivery at scale of known effective interventions that will maximise child development, growth and survival. The vision is to do this by working in close collaboration with government programmes in India and Pakistan, and modifying the approach, content and supervision of existing community based programmes to develop an innovative intervention package that * Is designed from the outset to be feasible, affordable and appropriate for delivery at scale. * Is delivered by low cost community based agents through home visits from pregnancy through the first 2 years of life, which * promote evidence based newborn and child survival interventions * use a problem solving and counselling approach, rather than the standard didactic approach, using techniques informed by evidence from the cognitive behaviour and interpersonal psychotherapy fields. * teach care giving skills, such as early recognition of infant signals and capacity, enhancing mother baby interactions, providing stimulation for cognitive growth and development. * support optimal infant and young child feeding practices. * encourage participation of other family members, e.g. fathers and grandmothers. * is informed by the Care for Development Package developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations International Emergency Children's Fund. * Includes regular supervision, monitoring and evaluation to support the community based agents and ensure the quality of the intervention activities carried out. * Includes a range of supporting activities developed to provide an enabling environment for mothers and families to carry out the interventions and skills promoted. These might include, for example, community group meetings, and sensitisation sessions with health staff. The specific objectives of "SPRING" are 1. To test this intervention package through cluster randomised controlled trials in two settings, one in India and one in Pakistan, both with high rates of undernutrition and well established but somewhat different community based agent programmes. 2. To evaluate the impact of the intervention on Infant mortality, child development and growth Maternal psychosocial distress. Coverage of key promoted interventions. 3. To evaluate and monitor all aspects of the intervention process and implementation 4. To cost the delivery of the intervention, and assess its cost effectiveness. 5. To assess the effectiveness of the intervention in reducing inequities in trial outcomes.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 2014
End Date
October 2017
Last Updated
8 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • All liveborn babies whose mothers reside within the trial evaluation zones

Exclusion Criteria

  • major congenital malformation
  • maternal death in neonatal period

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

infant mortality

Time Frame: the first year of life

the % of newborns who die during the first year of life

stunting

Time Frame: 18-24 months

% children stunted, with stunting defined as below -2 standard deviations of height for age using the WHO growth standards

child development

Time Frame: 18-24 months of age

a range of psychometric outcome measures covering several domains including cognition, motor, language, and psychosocial development plus maternal-child interaction and quality of the home environment.

maternal psychosocial distress/depression

Time Frame: 6-12 months postpartum

assessed using the 9 item Patient Health Questionnaire

Secondary Outcomes

  • wasting(18-24 months of age)
  • underweight(18-24 months of age)
  • age-specific infant mortality(during the first year of life)
  • % adopting key promoted behaviours(from pregnancy up to age 2)

Study Sites (2)

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