TY - JOUR
T1 - Kangaroo Mother Care implementation research to develop models for accelerating scale-up in India and Ethiopia: study protocol for an adequacy evaluation
AU - KMC Scale-Up Study Group
AU - Medhanyie, Araya Abrha
AU - Alemu, Hibret
AU - Asefa, Anteneh
AU - Beyene, Selemawit Asfaw
AU - Gebregizabher, Fisseha Ashebir
AU - Aziz, Khalid
AU - Bhandari, Nita
AU - Beyene, Habtamu
AU - Brune, Thomas
AU - Chan, Grace
AU - Cranmer, John N
AU - Darmstadt, G
AU - Duguma, Dereje
AU - Fikre, Addisalem
AU - Andualem, Bizuayehu Gashaw
AU - Gobezayehu, Abebe Gebremariam
AU - Mariam, Damen Haile
AU - Abay, Tedros Hailu
AU - Mohan, H L
AU - Jadaun, Arun
AU - Jayanna, K
AU - Kajal, F N U
AU - Kar, Arin
AU - Krishna, Raghav
AU - Kumar, Aarti
AU - Kumar, Vishwajeet
AU - Madhur, Tarun Kumar
AU - Belew, Mulusew Lijalem
AU - M, Rajini
AU - Martines, Jose
AU - Mazumder, Sarmila
AU - Amin, Hajira
AU - Mony, Prem K
AU - Muleta, Mekonnen
AU - Pileggi-Castro, Cynthia
AU - Pn Rao, Suman
AU - Estifanos, Abiy Seifu
AU - Sibley, Lynn M
AU - Singhal, Nalini
AU - Tadele, Henok
AU - Tariku, Abraham
AU - Lemango, Ephrem Tekle
AU - Tadesse, Birkneh Tilahun
AU - Upadhyay, Ravi
AU - Worku, Bogale
AU - Hadush, Marta Yemane
AU - Bahl, Rajiv
N1 - FTX; DOAJ; (CC BY 4.0); © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - INTRODUCTION: Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) is the practice of early, continuous and prolonged skin-to-skin contact between the mother and the baby with exclusive breastfeeding. Despite clear evidence of impact in improving survival and health outcomes among low birth weight infants, KMC coverage has remained low and implementation has been limited. Consequently, only a small fraction of newborns that could benefit from KMC receive it.METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This implementation research project aims to develop and evaluate district-level models for scaling up KMC in India and Ethiopia that can achieve high population coverage. The project includes formative research to identify barriers and contextual factors that affect implementation and utilisation of KMC and design scalable models to deliver KMC across the facility-community continuum. This will be followed by implementation and evaluation of these models in routine care settings, in an iterative fashion, with the aim of reaching a successful model for wider district, state and national-level scale-up. Implementation actions would happen at three levels: 'pre-KMC facility'-to maximise the number of newborns getting to a facility that provides KMC; 'KMC facility'-for initiation and maintenance of KMC; and 'post-KMC facility'-for continuation of KMC at home. Stable infants with birth weight<2000 g and born in the catchment population of the study KMC facilities would form the eligible population. The primary outcome will be coverage of KMC in the preceding 24 hours and will be measured at discharge from the KMC facility and 7 days after hospital discharge.ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethics approval was obtained in all the project sites, and centrally by the Research Ethics Review Committee at the WHO. Results of the project will be submitted to a peer-reviewed journal for publication, in addition to national and global level dissemination.STUDY STATUS: WHO approved protocol: V.4-12 May 2016-Protocol ID: ERC 2716. Study implementation beginning: April 2017. Study end: expected March 2019.TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Community Empowerment Laboratory, Uttar Pradesh, India (ISRCTN12286667); St John's National Academy of Health Sciences, Bangalore, India and Karnataka Health Promotion Trust, Bangalore, India (CTRI/2017/07/008988); Society for Applied Studies, Delhi (NCT03098069); Oromia, Ethiopia (NCT03419416); Amhara, SNNPR and Tigray, Ethiopia (NCT03506698).
AB - INTRODUCTION: Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) is the practice of early, continuous and prolonged skin-to-skin contact between the mother and the baby with exclusive breastfeeding. Despite clear evidence of impact in improving survival and health outcomes among low birth weight infants, KMC coverage has remained low and implementation has been limited. Consequently, only a small fraction of newborns that could benefit from KMC receive it.METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This implementation research project aims to develop and evaluate district-level models for scaling up KMC in India and Ethiopia that can achieve high population coverage. The project includes formative research to identify barriers and contextual factors that affect implementation and utilisation of KMC and design scalable models to deliver KMC across the facility-community continuum. This will be followed by implementation and evaluation of these models in routine care settings, in an iterative fashion, with the aim of reaching a successful model for wider district, state and national-level scale-up. Implementation actions would happen at three levels: 'pre-KMC facility'-to maximise the number of newborns getting to a facility that provides KMC; 'KMC facility'-for initiation and maintenance of KMC; and 'post-KMC facility'-for continuation of KMC at home. Stable infants with birth weight<2000 g and born in the catchment population of the study KMC facilities would form the eligible population. The primary outcome will be coverage of KMC in the preceding 24 hours and will be measured at discharge from the KMC facility and 7 days after hospital discharge.ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethics approval was obtained in all the project sites, and centrally by the Research Ethics Review Committee at the WHO. Results of the project will be submitted to a peer-reviewed journal for publication, in addition to national and global level dissemination.STUDY STATUS: WHO approved protocol: V.4-12 May 2016-Protocol ID: ERC 2716. Study implementation beginning: April 2017. Study end: expected March 2019.TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Community Empowerment Laboratory, Uttar Pradesh, India (ISRCTN12286667); St John's National Academy of Health Sciences, Bangalore, India and Karnataka Health Promotion Trust, Bangalore, India (CTRI/2017/07/008988); Society for Applied Studies, Delhi (NCT03098069); Oromia, Ethiopia (NCT03419416); Amhara, SNNPR and Tigray, Ethiopia (NCT03506698).
KW - Breast Feeding/methods
KW - Ethiopia/epidemiology
KW - Female
KW - Health Promotion/methods
KW - Humans
KW - India/epidemiology
KW - Infant
KW - Infant Mortality/trends
KW - Infant, Newborn
KW - Kangaroo-Mother Care Method/methods
KW - Male
KW - Mothers
U2 - 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025879
DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025879
M3 - A1: Web of Science-article
C2 - 31753865
SN - 2044-6055
VL - 9
JO - BMJ Open
JF - BMJ Open
IS - 11
M1 - e025879
ER -