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The Effectiveness of Multi-pronged Interventions to Improve Institutional Delivery in South Ethiopia
Sponsor: Prof Yves Jacquemyn
Summary
This study aims to improve the health and safety of mothers during pregnancy and childbirth by working closely with their husbands. In many communities in Ethiopia, husbands play an important role in decisions about where women give birth. The study involves educating husbands in group sessions to help them understand how to support their wives during pregnancy, prepare for childbirth, recognize danger signs, and encourage giving birth in health centers where skilled care is available. At the same time, some health workers receive training to improve their ability to handle childbirth emergencies and provide respectful, culturally sensitive care. Communities are divided into groups that receive either husband education, health worker training, both, or no additional support. The study will see which approach helps more women deliver safely in health centers and receive care after birth. By involving husbands and improving health worker skills, this study hopes to support mothers better and improve outcomes for families.
Key Details
Gender
MALE
Age Range
Any - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
1680
Start Date
2025-07-27
Completion Date
2026-04-15
Last Updated
2025-08-21
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Husband Group Health education.
The community-based husband group health education will target expectant fathers with pregnant partners. It will focus on reshaping gender-related attitudes and beliefs, promoting caregiving best practices, preventing violence against women, and improving men's involvement in maternal health. The intervention will comprise group sessions with 20 participants each, conducted over three sessions lasting 2.5 hours each, with a 15-day interval between sessions. The sessions will cover key topics, including recognizing obstetric danger signs, preparing for childbirth, fostering men's engagement in maternal health, advocating nonviolence and shared responsibility, and encouraging joint decision-making.
Helping Mothers Survive + RMC
The "Helping Mothers Survive" training is designed by Jhpiego, an affiliate of Johns Hopkins University, in collaboration with global health partners, including the World Health Organization (WHO), Laerdal Global Health, and the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) for healthcare professionals involved in childbirth care focusing on saving lives at birth in low-resource settings. This on-site training will use realistic simulations to enhance skills in identifying and managing key causes of maternal mortality, such as postpartum hemorrhage and preeclampsia, starting with essential labor care. The program employs the MamaNatalie birthing simulator, a low-tech realistic tool for hands-on practice developed by Laerdal Global Health. MamaNatalie features a model uterus with a neonate, placenta, and umbilical cord, enabling simulations of postpartum hemorrhage, breech delivery, vacuum-assisted birth, and normal labor.
Locations (1)
Arba Minch university
Arba Minch, Southern Nations Nationalities Regional State, Ethiopia