The TARANG Intervention
- Conditions
- FeasibilityAcceptabilityFamily PlanningUnintended Pregnancy
- Interventions
- Behavioral: TARANG
- Registration Number
- NCT06320964
- Lead Sponsor
- University of California, San Francisco
- Brief Summary
The mixed methods pilot study aims to evaluate the acceptability, feasibility, and implementation challenges of the TARANG intervention in villages in rural/tribal Rajasthan to inform the study design and operational details for a larger cluster-randomized controlled trial.
- Detailed Description
Participants will participate in the single group in the TARANG intervention arm and receive the sessions that will enable them to navigate newly formed relationships (e.g. spousal communication, healthy relationships with in-laws, establishing peer network, and negotiation skills), improve participants awareness of sexual reproductive health, enable participants to challenge inequitable gender norms to reduce unintended pregnancies.
Newly married women (daughters-in-law) received 17 sessions; husbands received 4 sessions and mothers-in-law received 4 sessions. The sessions are implemented by NGO partner, Vikalp Sansthan via trained facilitators/moderators who are supervised by NGO staff.
In this mixed methods pilot study, we aimed to qualitatively understand the participants' acceptability, feasibility of the TARANG intervention delivery, content, modules, etc. We also aimed to capture the qualitative impact of the TARANG intervention and pilot activities in communities/villages as well as to understand the operational challenges of delivery from participants and NGO moderators (key informants) delivering the intervention. Quantitative pre- and post-surveys were conducted to understand implementation outcomes such as feasibility, acceptability, and satisfaction, among other outcomes.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 42
Newly married women:
- Age 18-25 years at the time of wedding
- Does not plan to move out of the area for the period of the intervention
- Mother-in-law has agreed to support daughter-in-law's participation in the study
- Mother-in-law and husband are eligible for the study participation
Husbands:
- 18 years or more at the time of the wedding
- Does not plan to move out of the village during period of the intervention
- Mother and wife are eligible for study participation
Mothers-in-law:
- Has a daughter-in-law who is eligible and willing to participate in the study
- Provides individual consent to participate in the study
- Assents for daughter-in-law to participate in the study
- Does not plan to move out of the village during period of the intervention
- The son and the daughter-in-law are eligible for study participation
Newly married women:
- Wanting to have a child in the next 12 months at the time of baseline
- Cognitive ability to participate in surveys
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description TARANG arm TARANG The newly married women received 16 weekly group sessions and one rapport-building session, while the husbands and mothers-in-law received four group sessions each over four months. The TARANG intervention was delivered via gender-matched moderators from Vikalp Sansthan and uses three overarching themes: sexual and reproductive health, gender norms, and empowerment.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Feasibility of the Intervention Post-intervention at 5 month endline survey Proportion of participants who complete 50% of the intervention sessions
Acceptability Post-intervention at 5 month endline survey Proportion of participants who were completely or somewhat satisfied with the intervention
Usefulness Post-intervention at 5 month endline survey Proportion of participants who found the TARANG intervention sessions very useful or somewhat useful
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Vikalp Sansthan
🇮🇳Udaipur, Rajasthan, India