Abstract

Effective prevention and control of diarrhoea requires caregivers to comply with a suite of proven measures, including exclusive breastfeeding, handwashing with soap, correct use of oral rehydration salts, and zinc administration. We aimed to assess the effect of a novel behaviour change intervention using emotional drivers on caregiver practice of these behaviours. We did a cluster randomised controlled trial in Lusaka Province, Zambia. A random sample of 16 health centres (clusters) were selected from a sampling frame of 81 health centres in three of four districts in Lusaka Province using a computerised random number generator. Each cluster was randomly assigned 1:1 to either the intervention-clinic events, community events, and radio messaging-or to a standard care control arm, both for 6 months. Primary outcomes were exclusive breastfeeding (self-report), handwashing with soap (observation), oral rehydration salt solution preparation (demonstration), and zinc use in diarrhoea treatment (self-report). We measured outcome behaviours at baseline before start of intervention and 4-6 weeks post-intervention through repeat cross-sectional surveys with mothers of an infant younger than 6 months and primary caregivers of a child younger than 5 years with recent diarrhoea. We compared outcomes on an intention-to-treat population between intervention and control groups adjusted for baseline behaviour. The study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02081521. Between Jan 20 and Feb 3, 2014, we recruited 306 mothers of an infant aged 0-5 months (156 intervention, 150 standard care) and 343 primary caregiver of a child aged 0-59 months with recent diarrhoea (176 intervention, 167 standard care) at baseline. Between Oct 20 to Nov 7, 2014, we recruited 401 mothers of an infant 0-5 months (234 intervention, 167 standard care) and 410 primary caregivers of a child 0-59 months with recent diarrhoea (257 intervention, 163 standard care) at endline. Intervention was associated with increased prevalence of self-reported exclusive breastfeeding of infants aged 0-5 months (adjusted difference 10·5%, 95% CI 0·9-19·9). Other primary outcomes were not affected by intervention. Cluster intervention exposure ranged from 11-81%, measured by participant self-report with verification questions. Comparison of control and intervention clusters with coverage greater than 35% provided strong evidence of an intervention effect on oral rehydration salt solution preparation and breastfeeding outcomes. The intervention may have improved exclusive breastfeeding (assessed by self-reporting), but intervention effects were diluted in clusters with low exposure. Complex caregiver practices can improve through interventions built around human motives, but these must be implemented more intensely. Absolute Return for Kids (ARK) and Comic Relief.

Highlights

  • We designed a novel intervention to improve multiple behaviours related to diarrhoea prevention and management in Zambia by associating their practice with new motivations elicited through emotional demonstrations and a unifying campaign theme. In this Article, we report the effect of this unconventional campaign on caregiver practice of exclusive breastfeeding, handwashing with soap, and use of correctly prepared oral rehydration salts (ORS) and zinc to treat childhood diarrhoea

  • 13 eligible individuals declined to participate in the study at either baseline or endline

  • The mean age of infants included in the survey of infants younger than 6 months at follow-up was similiar between study arms. 92% of birth dates in each arm were verified using the health card for children younger than 5 years

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Inexpensive interventions that can prevent most diarrhoea morbidity and mortality have been available for many years, yet diarrhoea remains one of the biggest killers of children worldwide.[1]. The widespread adoption of diarrhoea control measures could prevent 95% of child mortality from diarrhoea by 2025.3 These control measures could subsequently reduce susceptibility to pneumonia 4 and undernutrition,[5] and improve cognitive development.[6] In reality, these benefits are limited because of low coverage and uptake of these interventions, in those most at risk.[3]. Exclusive breastfeeding is associated with reduced childhood diarrhoea mortality and morbidity,[7] and quicker recovery during illness,[8] when infants are exclusively breastfeed for the first 6 months of life,[9] yet fewer than 40% of infants aged 0–5 months are breastfeed exclusively.[10] Handwashing with soap can prevent up to 40% of diarrhoeal episodes, yet only about www.thelancet.com/lancetgh Vol 4 December 2016

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.