| Literature DB >> 28351355 |
Sumedha Sharma1, Olalekan O Adetoro2, Marianne Vidler1, Sharla Drebit1, Beth A Payne1, David O Akeju3, Akinmade Adepoju4, Ebunoluwa Jaiyesimi4, John Sotunsa5, Zulfiqar A Bhutta6,7, Laura A Magee8,9, Peter von Dadelszen8,9, Olukayode Dada4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite increased investment in community-level maternal health interventions, process evaluations of such interventions are uncommon, and can be instrumental in understanding mediating factors leading to outcomes. In Nigeria, where an unacceptably number of maternal deaths occur (maternal mortality ratio of 814/100,000 livebirths), the Community Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) study (NCT01911494) aimed to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity with a complex intervention of five interrelated components. Building from previous frameworks, we illustrate a methodology to evaluate implementation processes of the complex CLIP intervention, assess mechanisms of impact and identify emerging unintended causal pathways.Entities:
Keywords: Complex interventions; Implementation research; Maternal health; Nigeria; Ogun; Process evaluation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28351355 PMCID: PMC5371276 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2124-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 2Constructs of process evaluation for the CLIP intervention in Ogun State: The key functions assessed will be implementation (the infrastructure through which intervention is delivered, how it is delivered and the ‘what’ ‘quantity and quality’ of intervention), mechanisms of impact (how interaction between intervention activities and participants effect outcomes), and context (evaluating external factors which shape or may be shaped by intervention). As evident, these functions are non-linear and mutually-informative
Fig. 1Logic model of the CLIP intervention in Ogun, Nigeria
Process evaluation questions for assessing implementation of interventiona
| Constructs | Aims to be evaluated | Questions |
|---|---|---|
| Fidelity | 1.To what extent was the CLIP intervention implemented consistently with the CLIP protocol? | 1.What constitutes as adherence for each component of the CLIP intervention? |
| Dose (delivered and received) | How much of the CLIP intervention was delivered? (‘dose’) | 1.How many antenatal visits were delivered? |
| How much of the CLIP intervention was received? (‘dose received’) | 1.How can participant behaviours be used to assess engagement? | |
| Reach | 1.What is the reach of the CLIP intervention? | 1.What are the target populations for each component of the CLIP intervention? |
| Adaptation | 1.What were the alterations made to the CLIP intervention to adapt it to the Nigerian context? | 1.How will the adaptations made in the design or delivery of the CLIP intervention be identified, tracked and monitored? |
| Context | 1.What are the factors external to the CLIP intervention that may influence its implementation? | 1.How will the contextual factors (including community, health system, sociodemographic, political factors) be identified, assessed and monitored? |
a(adapted from Saunders et al [10])
Considerations for planning CLIP Nigeria Process Evaluation Methodsa
| Methodological component | General definition | Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| Design | Timing of data collection | Pre-intervention and early-intervention |
| Data sources | Sampling and sources of data collection | 1.Pregnant women receiving the CLIP intervention |
| Data collection tools or measures | Instruments, tools, and guides used for gathering process- evaluation data | 1.PIERS On the Move (POM) mHealth tool |
| Data collection procedures | Protocols for how the data collection tools are administered | 1.Data collection protocol |
| Data management | Procedures for gathering data from the field and data entry; data quality checks; data security; data monitoring procedures. | 1.Data security management, such as encryption of POM data using Blowfish algorithm, and creation of audit trails for new records |
| Data analysis and synthesis | Statistical and/or qualitative methods used to analyze, synthesize, and/or summarize data. | 1.Thematic analysis |
a(adapted from Saunders et al [10])
Sources and data collection tools
| Source | Data collection tool | Timing of data collection | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pregnant women registered in the CLIP Study | Registered women who receive the CLIP intervention at the primary health centres | PIERS On the Move (POM) application | During intervention |
| Registered women who received recommendations from the intervention | Case reports | During intervention | |
| Women who received community engagement sessions | Community engagement logs and reports | During intervention | |
| Registered women who are a part of leading community engagement efforts (survivors clubs) | Community engagement logs | During intervention | |
| Community health care providers | CHEWs/HA’s who receive CLIP training | • Pre- and post- tests | Pre-intervention and during intervention |
| Medical Officers | Focus group discussions | Pre-intervention | |
| Medical professionals who participated in CPD (Continuous Professional Development) events | CPD activities Log | Pre-intervention, and during intervention | |
| Community members/stakeholders | Community members who participated in community engagements | Community engagement logs | During intervention |
| State government officials | Meeting reports/event reports | Pre-intervention, during intervention and during-intervention | |
| Local Government officials | • Interviews | Pre-intervention, during intervention and during-intervention | |
| Grassroots leaders | • Interviews | Pre-intervention, during intervention | |
| Transport unions | Community engagement logs | During intervention | |
| Shopkeepers | Community engagement logs | During intervention | |
| Research Staff | Key informant interviews | Pre and post- intervention | |