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Advancing the Health of Rural Communities in Uganda Through Strong Community Health Programs

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Health Behavior
Health Care Utilization
Incentives
Interventions
Behavioral: CHW Incentives Intervention
Registration Number
NCT05176106
Lead Sponsor
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Brief Summary

The overarching goal of this study is to improve the health of women and children in rural areas of Uganda through strengthening of the community health workforce, which provides critical health services to the rural poor.

Detailed Description

Uganda, like several countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, faces a shortage of skilled healthcare workers, and a disproportionate concentration of workers in urban areas. This disparity has dire consequences for rural populations, who have higher fertility rates, lower utilization of maternal and child health services, lower levels of access to safe drinking water and sanitation services, and poorer vaccination coverage. Women and children in rural and remote communities bear the disproportionate brunt of poor access to and poor quality of health care. Village Health Teams (VHTs), Uganda's community health workers (CHW), were introduced to address some of these inequities by providing basic health services to the rural poor. However, like many CHW programs globally, the VHT program has high levels of attrition, owing to inadequate systems and financial support.

The objectives of this study are to understand:

1. What structure and group of incentives is best suited to motivate VHTs, improve their performance in the delivery of services, and increase their retention in the health workforce?

2. What is the behavioral mechanisms through which new incentives may work or fail to work?

3. How do the changes in the national VHT program impact utilization of maternal and child health services, sanitary practices, and perception of quality of health services at the community-level? What is the impact of COVID-19 on VHT practices on community health?

This study will evaluate a 1-year incentives intervention provided to VHTs in Uganda's Masindi District. It is a two-armed clinical trial, where parishes will be randomized to the incentives intervention (i.e., an incentives package will be provided to VHTs practicing in the intervention parishes; control parishes VHTs will not receive an incentives package). The primary outcomes include assessing VHT performance, VHT motivation, VHT retention, trends in utilization of maternal and child health services, and trends in the adoption of sanitary practices. Outcomes for VHT performance, VHT retention, trends in utilization of maternal and child health services, and trends in adoption of sanitary practices will be measured monthly. Outcomes for VHT motivation will be measured twice, at baseline (Month 1) and endline (Month 12).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
769
Inclusion Criteria
  • Must be an active VHT in Uganda's Masindi district.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Anyone who fails to meet the inclusion criteria specified above will be excluded.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Intervention-Randomized ParishesCHW Incentives InterventionParishes will be randomized in Masindi District to receive the intervention (i.e., an incentives package). VHTs who are active in that parish will thereby receive the incentives intervention.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in VHT MotivationBaseline (Month 1) and Endline (Month 12)

Measure the percentage of VHTs who have improved motivation during the course of the 1-year intervention through use of the Close-To-Community (CTC) Provider Motivational Indicator Scale, which measures satisfaction, organizational commitment, community commitment, and work conscientiousness.

Change in Maternal and Child Health Services UtilizationMeasured monthly for 12 months

Measure change in maternal and child health services utilization, which includes proportion of antenatal care coverage, proportion of immunization coverage, and proportion of children under 5 who have been visited by a VHT, over the course of the 1-year intervention.

Change in VHT PerformanceMeasured monthly for 12 months

Measure change in average number of VHT visits made over the course of the 1-year intervention. Types of VHT visits include: average number of home visits, antenatal care visits, postnatal care visits, visits to support immunization of children, visits to talk about safe drinking water, visits to examine latrines and observe handwashing, and number of referrals made to the health facility over the last month.

Change in VHT RetentionMeasured monthly for 12 months

Measure the percentage of VHTs who report to the health facility over the course of the 1-year intervention.

Change in Adoption of Sanitary PracticesMeasured monthly for 12 months

Measure changes in the adoption of sanitary practices, which includes assessing the average number of households with latrines, improved latrines, handwashing facilities, safe drinking water, and are open defecation free over the course of the 1-year intervention.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Makerere University School of Public Health

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Kampala, Uganda

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