Effect of a congregation-based intervention on uptake of HIV testing and linkage to care in pregnant women in Nigeria (Baby Shower): a cluster randomised trial
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Authors
Ezeanolue, Echezona E.
Obiefune, Michael C.
Ezeanolue, Chinenye O.
Ehiri, John E.
Osuji, Alice
Ogidi, Amaka G.
Hunt, Aaron T.
Patel, Dina
Yang, Wei
Pharr, Jennifer R.
Issue Date
2015
Type
Article
Language
en_US
Keywords
Alternative Title
Abstract
Few effective community-based interventions exist to increase HIV testing and uptake of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in pregnant women in hard-to-reach resource-limited settings. We assessed whether delivery of an intervention through churches, the Healthy Beginning Initiative, would increase uptake of HIV testing in pregnant women compared with standard health facility referral. Methods In this cluster randomised trial, we enrolled self-identified pregnant women aged 18 years and older who attended churches in southeast Nigeria. We randomised churches (clusters) to intervention or control groups, stratified by mean annual number of infant baptisms (<80 vs >= 80). The Healthy Beginning Initiative intervention included health education and on-site laboratory testing implemented during baby showers in intervention group churches, whereas participants in control group churches were referred to health facilities as standard. Participants and investigators were aware of church allocation. The primary outcome was confirmed HIV testing. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier number NCT 01795261. Findings Between Jan 20, 2013, and Aug 31, 2014, we enrolled 3002 participants at 40 churches (20 per group). 1309 (79%) of 1647 women attended antenatal care in the intervention group compared with 1080 (80%) of 1355 in the control group. 1514 women (92%) in the intervention group had an HIV test compared with 740 (55%) controls (adjusted odds ratio 11.2, 95% CI 8.77-14.25; p<0.0001). Interpretation Culturally adapted, community-based programmes such as the Healthy Beginning Initiative can be effective in increasing HIV screening in pregnant women in resource-limited settings. Copyright Ezeanolue et al. Open Access article published under the terms of CC BY-NC-ND.
Description
Citation
Ezeanolue, E. E., Obiefune, M. C., Ezeanolue, C. O., Ehiri, J. E., Osuji, A., Ogidi, A. G., … Ogedegbe, G. (2015). Effect of a congregation-based intervention on uptake of HIV testing and linkage to care in pregnant women in Nigeria (Baby Shower): a cluster randomised trial. The Lancet Global Health, 3(11), e692�"e700. doi:10.1016/s2214-109x(15)00195-3
Publisher
Lancet Global Health
License
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Journal
Volume
Issue
PubMed ID
ISSN
2214-109X