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Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach for Prevention of MTC HIV Transmission

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
HIV
Interventions
Other: Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach (SAIA)
Registration Number
NCT03425136
Lead Sponsor
University of Washington
Brief Summary

Optimizing the prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission cascade minimizes drop offs from one step to the next to maximize the benefits of antiretroviral therapy on maternal health and pediatric survival, growth, and development. This proposal scales-up a health systems intervention (the systems analysis and improvement approach - SAIA) that packages systems engineering methods (including cascade analysis, flow mapping, and continuous quality improvement) and was previously shown to be effective in improving the prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission cascade. By spreading the SAIA through routine district management structures, and studying the implementation process, this study will build evidence on how to achieve rapid, sustainable and scalable improvements in services that can dramatically improve population health in resource limited countries.

Detailed Description

Despite significant increases in global health investment and the availability of low-cost, efficacious interventions designed to prevent mother to child HIV transmission (PMTCT) in low and middle income countries with high HIV burden, the translation of these scientific advances into effective delivery strategies has been slow, uneven and incomplete. As a result, pediatric HIV infection remains largely uncontrolled. The introduction of the Option B+ strategy - where HIV-infected pregnant women rapidly initiate lifelong antiretroviral therapy (ART) independent of disease status - has the potential to dramatically reduce HIV transmission during pregnancy, birth and the breastfeeding period, and as a result, it has been scaled up throughout high HIV burden countries in sub-Saharan Africa. Despite these significant investments to scale-up Option B+, results have been poor, with high rates of loss to follow-up and low viral suppression, leading to continued HIV transmission to children and HIV-associated morbidity among mothers. A previous research project (the Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach - or SAIA - cluster randomized trial) demonstrated that a package of systems engineering tools including cascade analysis, process mapping, and continuous quality improvement, was effective at improving flow through the PMTCT cascade across three sub-Saharan African countries. The overall goal of this application is to develop a model to deliver the SAIA intervention (SAIA-SCALE) that is led by district maternal and child health (MCH) supervisors (rather than research nurses), to serve as a foundation for national scale-up. We propose to implement the SAIA intervention in all districts in one province in Mozambique using MCH supervisors as disseminating agents, who will implement SAIA in subordinate health facilities. Using a three-year phased-in design, 12 districts will be randomly allocated into three implementation waves, and a mixed-methods evaluation will be used to assess the impact of the intervention. Our specific aims are to: Aim 1: Develop an effective district-based dissemination and implementation strategy for the SAIA intervention (SAIA-SCALE), using the RE-AIM model to evaluate the program's Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance; and Aim 2: Using activity based micro-costing and mathematical models of HIV transmission, estimate the budget and program impact from the payer perspective to scale-up the SAIA intervention compared to the standard of care. The results of this implementation research are expected to generate knowledge of global health significance, and by providing a real-world implementation model for the SAIA intervention and programmatically relevant information, is designed to lead to rapid policy translation for future scale-up in countries with high burden of HIV and weak PMTCT delivery systems.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
36
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SEQUENTIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
SAIA (Systems Analysis & Improvement)Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach (SAIA)Intervention is a five-step package of industrial engineering methods known as SAIA (the systems analysis and improvement approach) delivered by district maternal and child health managers to subordinate health facilities that provide prevention of mother-to-child HIV services.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Maternal retention in care, evaluated using clinic registry data6-months post ART initiation

Women retained in care (picked up their 6-month pharmacy refill within 15 days of scheduled pickup)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Maternal viral load assessment, evaluated using clinic registry dataWithin 1 month of delivery (birth)

Proportion of women on ART with viral load assessment

Facility Delivery, evaluated using clinic registry dataAt birth

Proportion of HIV-infected women enrolled in antenatal care with a facility delivery

Maternal ART Adherence, evaluated using clinic registry dataAt 3 and 6 months post ART initiation

Proportion of expected ART medicines picked up at study clinics

Viral Suppression, evaluated using clinic registry dataWithin 1 months of delivery

Proportion of viral load samples with undetectable viral load (\<20 copies/mL)

Early Infant Diagnosis for HIV, evaluated using clinic registry datawithin 8 weeks of birth

Proportion of HIV-exposed infants tested for HIV (PCR) within 8 weeks of birth

Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission Rate, evaluated using clinic registry data6 months postpartum

Proportion of HIV-exposed infants testing positive for HIV

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Manica Province

🇲🇿

Chimoio, Manica, Mozambique

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