Effect of a community health worker delivered health, nutrition and responsive stimulation package and conditional cash transfers on child development and growth in rural Tanzania: Protocol for a cluster-randomized trial

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Study Justification:
– Child health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation interventions have been developed to improve child survival, growth, and development outcomes in low- and middle-income countries.
– Research on integrated implementation approaches to deliver and promote uptake of these interventions is needed, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa.
– This study aims to examine the effect of a community health worker (CHW) delivered intervention, alone and in combination with conditional cash transfers (CCT), on child development and growth in rural Tanzania.
Study Highlights:
– Cluster-randomized controlled trial conducted in rural Morogoro region, Tanzania.
– Three trial arms: (1) CHW intervention, (2) CHW intervention + CCT, and (3) Control (existing clinic-based services).
– Participants include mothers or primary caregivers who are currently pregnant or have a child under 1 year of age.
– CHWs will visit households every 4-6 weeks to deliver the intervention package, and CCTs will be provided for antenatal care and routine child health and growth monitoring clinic visits.
– Primary outcomes include child development assessed by the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development (BSID-III) and child height-for-age z-score.
– Secondary outcomes include a range of maternal, child, and household outcomes.
Recommendations for Lay Reader:
– This study aims to improve child health, nutrition, and development outcomes in rural Tanzania.
– The study will test the effectiveness of a community health worker intervention, alone and in combination with conditional cash transfers, on child development and growth.
– The results of this study may help inform policies and programs aimed at improving child well-being in similar settings.
Recommendations for Policy Maker:
– Consider implementing community health worker interventions, along with conditional cash transfers, to improve child development and growth outcomes in rural areas.
– Support the training and deployment of community health workers to deliver health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation interventions.
– Allocate resources for conditional cash transfers to incentivize antenatal care and routine child health and growth monitoring clinic visits.
– Monitor and evaluate the implementation and impact of these interventions to inform future policies and programs.
Key Role Players:
– Community health workers: Trained individuals who will deliver the intervention package to households.
– Study coordinator: Responsible for supervising community health workers and ensuring intervention delivery.
– Fieldworkers: Conduct home interviews and collect data from mothers/caregivers.
– Nurse assessors: Administer the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development (BSID-III) to assess child development.
– Statistician: Conducts randomization and data analysis.
Cost Items for Planning Recommendations:
– CHW salaries: Approximately 600,000 Tanzanian shillings (~$230) per month.
– Training costs: Including CHW training on the responsive stimulation intervention and BSID-III training for nurse assessors.
– Cash transfer payments: 10,000 Tanzanian shillings (~$4.30) per antenatal care visit and 5000 Tanzanian shillings (~$2.15) per routine child health and growth monitoring clinic visit.
– Administrative costs: Including supervision, coordination, and record-keeping.
– Research and data collection costs: Including fieldworkers’ salaries and data collection tools.
– Analysis and dissemination costs: Including data analysis and publication of study results.

The strength of evidence for this abstract is 8 out of 10.
The evidence in the abstract is strong because it describes a cluster-randomized controlled trial with a clear study design and objectives. The trial protocol was developed in accordance with established guidelines. The abstract also provides information on the primary and secondary outcomes, as well as the study population and intervention. However, to improve the evidence, the abstract could include more details on the sample size calculation, randomization process, and statistical analysis plan.

Background: Child health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation interventions have been developed to improve child survival, growth and development outcomes in low- and middle-income countries. Nevertheless, research on integrated implementation approaches to deliver and promote uptake of these interventions is needed, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. Methods/design: We will conduct a cluster-randomized controlled trial of a supply-side community health worker (CHW) delivered child health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation intervention alone and in combination with a demand-side conditional cash transfer (CCT) intervention to promote antenatal care and child growth monitoring attendance in rural Morogoro region, Tanzania. Twelve village clusters will be randomly assigned to one of the three trial arms: (1) CHW, (2) CHW + CCT, or (3) Control. Mothers (or another primary caregiver) residing in study villages are eligible for trial enrollment if they are currently pregnant or have a child < 1 year of age at the time of enrollment. For the duration of the trial, CHWs will visit households once every 4-6 weeks to deliver the intervention package and CCTs will be provided for documented antenatal care and routine child health and growth monitoring clinic visits. Participants will be followed-up at 9 months (midline) and 18 months (endline) post-randomization. The primary outcomes of the trial are child development assessed by the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development (BSID-III) and child height-for-age z-score. Secondary outcomes include a range of maternal, child and household outcomes. Discussion: This trial will provide evidence on the effect of CHWs and conditional cash transfers on child growth and development. The results of the trial may be generalizable to similar settings in sub-Saharan Africa. Trial registration: ISRCTN10323949, Retrospectively registered on October 3, 2017.

We will conduct a proof-of-concept cluster RCT to examine the effect of a supply-side CHW delivered health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation intervention alone and in combination with a demand-side CCT tied to antenatal care and routine child growth monitoring clinic attendance (trial registration: ISRCTN10323949). The trial protocol was developed by collaborators at the Ifakara Health Institute in Tanzania and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in the United States. This protocol (version 2.0/17 March 2017) was written in concordance with the Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials [16]. The trial flow diagram is presented in Fig. 1. Twelve village clusters in the Ifakara Health and Demographic Surveillance (HDSS) system were randomly assigned to one of the three trial arms: (i) CHW, (ii) CHW + CCT, or (iii) Control. The CHW arm will receive the CHW delivered health, nutrition and responsive stimulation intervention for the duration of the trial. The CHW + CCT arm will receive the same CHW intervention combined with a CCT intervention for the duration of the trial. The control arm will have access to the existing clinic-based health, nutrition and development services; no quality improvement to existing serves will be provided. A total of ~ 600 mother/caregiver-child dyads residing in the study villages will be enrolled. Study participants will be assessed at midline (9 months of follow-up) and endline (18 months of follow-up) for primary and secondary outcomes. Trial flow diagram The co-primary outcomes of the trial are (1) child development composite scores and (2) child linear growth as assessed by height/length-for-age z-score (HAZ) at trial endline. We will also assess effect of the interventions on child development and child linear growth at midline as secondary outcomes. Additional secondary outcomes include a range of household, maternal, and child outcomes that may be affected by either the CHW and/or CCTs interventions. Secondary outcomes assessed at midline and endline include: (i) child weight-for-age z-score (WAZ), (ii) child weight-for-height/length z-score (WHZ), (iii) child head circumference-for-age z-score (HCAZ), (iv) child mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) z-score, (v) antenatal and growth monitoring clinic visit attendance, (vi) child morbidities, (vii) child hospitalization, (viii) maternal depression and anxiety, (ix) maternal social support, (x) women’s empowerment, (xi) caregiver knowledge of child development, (xii) caregiver report on engagement in stimulation activities and (xiii) household food security. This trial is being conducted in the Ifakara Health Institute HDSS in the Kilombero and Ulanga districts in the Morogoro region of Tanzania [17]. The site is located between latitudes 8°00′S and 8°35′S and longitude 35°58′E to 36°48′E. The HDSS study area is located approximately 450 km by road from Dar es Salaam with a catchment population of ~ 400,000 people. The study area is predominately rural, and the majority of residents are subsistence farmers. A recent study conducted in the Ifakara HDSS found a 16.9% prevalence of low birthweight (< 2500 g) and a 36.2% stunting prevalence (HAZ < -2) among children 18–36 months of age [18]. Women/caregivers and their infants (if applicable) will be eligible for trial enrollment if they met the following inclusion criteria at the time of the enrollment visit: (1) permanent resident of study village, (2) currently pregnant (self-reported) or have a child < 1 year of age, (3) and provide written consent for enrollment. Women/caregivers will be excluded from participation if they: (1) are currently enrolled in any other clinical trial or intervention study, or (2) do not provide informed consent. Written informed consent will be obtained for all participants. Sample size calculations were based on randomization of 12 clusters with a cluster size of approximately 50 mother/caregiver-child pairs. We assumed a nominal Type I error rate (alpha) of 0.05 and assume a coefficient of variation of 0.49 an intra-cluster correlations of 0.01. We will have 80% power to detect a standardized mean difference (SMD) of 0.40 standard deviations in normalized anthropometric outcomes (HAZ, WHZ, WAZ), and 0.53 standard deviations of development z-scores. These are quite large effect sizes; however, this is a proof-of-concept trial and there is potential of the intervention package and the combination of CHWs and CCT to provide a sizable impact on child growth and development. Village clusters will be allocated in a 1:1:1 ratio to one of the three trials arms: (i) CHW, (ii) CHW + CCT, or (iii) Control. Stratified randomization will be done by a non-study statistician in Boston, USA according to a computer-generated randomization list with sequence blocks of three. Randomization will be stratified by semi-urban (six villages) and rural (six villages) villages to increase the likelihood of baseline balance. The CHW and CHW + CCT arms will receive the same supply-side CHW intervention. The project will recruit female CHWs living in the study villages catchment area who had completed a one-year government certified CHW program prior to being selected for the intervention. The government CHW curriculum included two semesters that each covered seven topics. The first semesters covered: (1) fundamentals of communication and customer service, (2) infection prevention and control, (3) management of health care facility, (4) computer application, (5) citizenship and gender, (6) management information systems, and (7) basic life support skills. The second semester covered: (1) fundamentals of social work, (2) disease prevention and control, (3) community-based reproductive, maternal and child health services, (4) community-based health promotion, (5) home-based care, (6) basics of entrepreneurship and life skills, and (7) health facility and community disease management. The main infant intervention components of the CHW curriculum include: 1) community-case management of under-5 childhood illness per Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI); 2) antenatal and postnatal pregnancy, delivery and essential newborn care counseling and danger signs identification; 3) family planning; 4) and emergency and routine referrals to facilities. The CHWs will be assigned to the study villages at the start of the trial. The salary for the CHWs is ~ 600,000 Tanzanian shillings (~$230) per month. We will train the CHWs to deliver a responsive stimulation intervention that was integrated into the routine CHW home visit program. The responsive stimulation intervention is a Tanzanian and Swahili adapted version of the UNICEF and WHO Care for Development package [19]. The intervention includes communication of essential early childhood development knowledge, promotion of caregivers’ sensitivity and responsiveness, developmentally appropriate play and communication activities, toy making, and problem solving. Caregivers are provided the opportunity to try out responsive stimulation activities with their young child and receive feedback and coaching from the CHW. The CHWs will received a one-week training in September 2017 on the responsive stimulation intervention that included integrated classroom and practical sessions. CHWs will conduct home visits every 4–6 weeks throughout the trial follow-up period (18 months) to deliver the health, nutrition and responsive stimulation intervention package. The intended duration of the visit is 30–60 min per household, dependent on the health and well-being of the mother and child. One study coordinator will supervise the CHWs throughout the intervention. CHWs will met individually with the study coordinator biweekly to report visit completion. The study coordinator will accompany CHWs at least once per month to supervise home visits and provide feedback on intervention delivery. CHWs will also keep administrative records including the duration of home visits and the composition of messages delivered at each visit that will be reviewed by the study coordinator once a month. Monthly meetings will be held with all CHWs and the study coordinator to discuss progress and troubleshoot emerging challenges. A three-day refresher training on the responsive stimulation intervention will be conducted at trial midline (9 months). We will conduct in-depth qualitative interviews with each CHW at intervention completion to document their experiences and suggestions for improvement. CHWs will also provide a demand-side CCT intervention to mothers/caregivers in the CHW + CCT arm. The conditions for the cash transfers are documented attendance of antenatal care or routine well-child health and growth monitoring clinic visits. Tanzania currently uses a focused antenatal care model with four visits; one before 16 weeks, at 20–24 weeks, at 28–32 weeks, and at 36 weeks gestation; postnatal child health and growth monitoring clinic visits are recommended to occur monthly until 2 years of age and then quarterly until 5 years [20, 21]. Reproductive and child health cards will be checked at CHW visits to document clinic visit attendance. CHWs will provide the CCTs for the duration of the follow-up period. Pregnant women will receive cash payments of 10,000 Tanzanian Shillings (~ $4.30) per antenatal care visit for up to four total visits. Mothers/caregivers will receive cash payments of 5000 Tanzanian Shillings (~ $2.15) per routine child health and growth monitoring clinic visit for up to one visit per month. Mothers/caregivers signed or provided thumbprints upon receipt of a cash transfer. The study coordinator will conduct random monthly spot-checks to ensure mothers/caregivers received CCTs as documented. Villages in the control arm will receive no intervention and have access to existing clinic-based services. No quality improvement activities will be undertaken by the study team. The schedule of trial enrollment, interventions, and assessments is presented in Fig. 2. Trained fieldworkers will conduct home interviews with mothers/caregivers at baseline, midline (9 months of follow-up) and endline (18 months of follow-up). The fieldworkers will be blinded to the randomized intervention arm. At baseline, all enrolled mothers/caregivers will be administered a standardized questionnaire including demographic and socioeconomic data. Child length/height, weight, head circumference, and MUAC will be taken in triplicate at baseline, midline and endline at the home. Child weight will be measured to the nearest 100 g using a digital scale (Seca, Hamburg, Germany). Length of children < 24 months of age will be measured to the nearest 0.1 cm with a length board (Seca) and height of children ≥24 months will be measured to the nearest 0.1 cm with the use of a portable stadiometer (Seca). Anthropometric z-scores will be calculated using the 2006 WHO child growth standards [22]. At baseline, midline and endline RCH cards will be used to assess antenatal care and child health clinic visit attendance. Schedule of enrollment, interventions and assessments (SPIRIT Figure) At baseline, midline and endline the Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL-25) will be administered to assess symptoms of depression and anxiety [23]. Functional dimensions of social support will be assessed with the Duke University–University of North Carolina Functional Social Support Questionnaire [24]. The Caregiver Knowledge of Child Development Inventory (CKCDI) will be administered to mothers/caregivers at baseline and midline [25]. At endline, we will also assess women’s empowerment with components of the Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index (WEAI) [26] and household food security with the Household Hunger Scale [27]. Maternal caregiver recall of child morbidities in the last two weeks (diarrhea, fever, and other morbidities) and any child hospitalizations during the study period will be assessed at midline and endline. All of these modules have been used in previous research studies in Tanzania. In order to assess child development at midline and end line, trained female research nurses will administer a Tanzania adapted and Swahili translated version of the Bayley Scales of Infant Development III (BSID-III) [18, 28]. The cognitive, expressive language, receptive language, fine motor, and gross motor subscales will be administered. We will select two BSID-III nurse assessors based on quantitative performance evaluations after a three-week BSID-III training, led by experts from Boston, USA. BSID-III composite scores for each development domain will be reported. The BSID-III assessors will be blinded to the participant’s allocated trial arm. In order to assess drift and ensure continued quality of implementation, the study coordinator will conduct weekly field-based supervision of BSID-III data collection at midline and endline. All primary analyses will be conducted based on the intention-to-treat (ITT) principle. Women who moved to neighboring villages will be analyzed in the village originally randomized. Despite randomization, it is possible that there may be some degree of imbalance of baseline prognostic factors between randomized trials arms due to the small number of clusters. As a result, we will re-assess intervention effects after adjusting for factors that are potentially imbalanced between randomized trial arms. All analyses will account for village clustering. We will use linear regression models to assess the intervention effect on individual-level BSID-III domain scores, HAZ, and other secondary continuous outcomes. We will use log-binomial models to assess treatment effects on binomial outcomes. Linear mixed effects models and generalized linear mixed models will be used to assess longitudinal continuous and binomial outcomes, respectively. We will also examine effect modification of any treatment effect by predefined baseline variables: maternal age, maternal education, maternal/caregiver parenting knowledge, parity, household wealth, marital status, paternal residence in household, maternal depression, maternal social support, child age, child sex, number of CHW visits received, and number of CCTs received. We will also present analyses collapsing the CHW and CHW + CCT arms. The trial protocol was approved by the Ifakara Health Institute IRB (reference number 007–2017), the Tanzanian National Health Research Ethics Sub-Committee (NatHREC; reference no. NIMR/HQ/R.8a/Vol.IX/2538), and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Institutional Review Board (reference no. IRB17–1001). Written informed consent will be sought from mothers and caregivers. The trial results will be disseminated locally in Tanzania and in international academic journals. Trial enrollment started on 14 September 2017 and follow-up is ongoing as of 16 May 2019.

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The innovation being described in this text is a cluster-randomized controlled trial of a supply-side community health worker (CHW) delivered child health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation intervention, combined with a demand-side conditional cash transfer (CCT) intervention. The goal of this trial is to improve child development and growth outcomes in rural Tanzania, particularly in the areas of child health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation. The trial involves assigning twelve village clusters to one of three trial arms: (1) CHW, (2) CHW + CCT, or (3) Control. The CHW arm receives the CHW intervention, the CHW + CCT arm receives both the CHW intervention and a CCT intervention tied to antenatal care and child growth monitoring clinic attendance, and the control arm has access to existing clinic-based services without any quality improvement activities. The trial will enroll approximately 600 mother/caregiver-child dyads residing in the study villages and will assess primary outcomes such as child development and child height-for-age z-score, as well as secondary outcomes including maternal, child, and household outcomes. The trial protocol was developed by collaborators at the Ifakara Health Institute in Tanzania and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in the United States. The trial is registered under ISRCTN10323949.
AI Innovations Description
The recommendation described in the provided description is to conduct a cluster-randomized controlled trial to evaluate the impact of a community health worker (CHW) delivered health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation intervention, both alone and in combination with a conditional cash transfer (CCT) intervention. The trial aims to improve child development and growth outcomes in rural Tanzania, specifically in the Morogoro region.

The trial will randomly assign twelve village clusters to one of three trial arms: (1) CHW intervention alone, (2) CHW intervention combined with CCT, or (3) Control group with access to existing clinic-based services. Mothers or primary caregivers residing in the study villages are eligible for enrollment if they are currently pregnant or have a child under 1 year of age.

The CHWs will visit households every 4-6 weeks to deliver the intervention package, which includes health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation activities. The CCT intervention will provide cash transfers to mothers/caregivers for documented attendance of antenatal care and routine child health and growth monitoring clinic visits.

The primary outcomes of the trial are child development assessed by the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development (BSID-III) and child height-for-age z-score. Secondary outcomes include various maternal, child, and household outcomes.

The trial aims to provide evidence on the effectiveness of CHWs and conditional cash transfers in improving child growth and development outcomes. The results of the trial may have implications for similar settings in sub-Saharan Africa.
AI Innovations Methodology
The study described in the provided text is a cluster-randomized controlled trial that aims to examine the effect of a community health worker (CHW) delivered health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation intervention, alone and in combination with a conditional cash transfer (CCT) intervention, on child development and growth in rural Tanzania. The trial will be conducted in the Morogoro region and will involve twelve village clusters randomly assigned to one of three trial arms: (1) CHW, (2) CHW + CCT, or (3) Control.

The methodology of the trial involves enrolling approximately 600 mother/caregiver-child dyads residing in the study villages. The primary outcomes of the trial are child development assessed by the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development (BSID-III) and child height-for-age z-score. Secondary outcomes include various maternal, child, and household outcomes. The trial will follow-up with participants at 9 months (midline) and 18 months (endline) post-randomization.

To simulate the impact of the recommendations on improving access to maternal health, a proof-of-concept cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be conducted. The trial will assess the effect of a supply-side CHW delivered health, nutrition, and responsive stimulation intervention, alone and in combination with a demand-side CCT tied to antenatal care and routine child growth monitoring clinic attendance. The trial will randomize twelve village clusters into three trial arms: CHW, CHW + CCT, or Control. The trial will enroll approximately 600 mother/caregiver-child dyads residing in the study villages and assess various outcomes related to child development, growth, and maternal, child, and household well-being.

The trial protocol was developed in accordance with the Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials (SPIRIT) guidelines and has been approved by the relevant ethics committees. The trial will use a combination of quantitative and qualitative data collection methods, including standardized questionnaires, anthropometric measurements, caregiver interviews, and assessments of child development using the BSID-III. Data analysis will be conducted using linear regression models, log-binomial models, and mixed effects models, accounting for village clustering.

The trial aims to provide evidence on the effect of CHWs and conditional cash transfers on child growth and development, with potential generalizability to similar settings in sub-Saharan Africa. The results of the trial will be disseminated locally in Tanzania and in international academic journals.

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