Feasibility of Introducing an Onsite Test for Syphilis in the Package of Antenatal Care in Burkina Faso

NCT03156751 · Status: COMPLETED · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 1205

Last updated 2017-05-17

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

This study used a pre post intervention mixed methods quasi-experimental design with a group of health facilities offering antenatal care (ANC) services (primary health centers in rural area) as the sampling units. This study was conducted in three phases, which consisted of a situational analysis using qualitative methods (Phase 1), selecting an appropriate test through evaluating 4 candidate tests and the participatory design and implementation of an intervention that included onsite training, provision of supplies and medicines, quality control and supervision (Phase 2), and an evaluation combining review of record tools, interviews, time motion study and estimating incremental costs (Phase 3). The conceptual framework draws on multilevel assessment (MLA), policy triangle framework, Medical Research Council framework for designing complex interventions and the Normalization Process Model (NPM). Methods included document review, seventy five interviews were conducted with health providers, district managers, facility managers, traditional healers, pregnant women, community health workers, and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO) managers in phase I and fourteen in phase III, non-participant observation, time-motion study, incremental cost analysis, and sensitivity, specificity and ease of use analysis of four candidate point-of care tests. Data were collected between 2012 and 2014. Qualitative data were analyzed through thematic analysis supported by Nvivo software. Quantitative data were analyzed through descriptive statistics such as frequency, mean and median supported by SPSS. Phase I identified barriers to implementation and uptake of syphilis testing at health provider and community levels. The most important barriers at provider level included fragmentation of services, poor communication between health workers and clients, failure to prescribe syphilis test, and low awareness of syphilis burden. Cost of testing, distance to laboratory and lack of knowledge about syphilis were identified as barriers at community level. Phase II: Alere DetermineTM Syphilis was the most sensitive of the four point-of-care tests evaluated. The components of the intervention were successfully implemented in the selected health facilities. Overall, phase III showed that it is feasible and acceptable to introduce a point of care test for syphilis in antenatal care services at primary health care level using the available staff. The findings suggested that an intervention that introduces point of care test for syphilis at antenatal care services is feasible, acceptable, and of comparable costs to HIV screening in pregnancy. Nonetheless, instructions and supervision need to be clearer to achieve optimal levels of screening and quality control, and barriers identified by health workers need to be overcome. The point-of care test for syphilis is likely to be acceptable by health workers as a routine service and incorporated as a normal practice in Burkina Faso context.

Conditions

  • Syphilis Infection
  • Diagnoses Disease

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

Feasibility of introducing onsite test for syphilis in the package of antenatal care at rural primary health care in Burkina Faso

This study used a pre post intervention mixed methods quasi-experimental design with a group of health facilities offering ANC services. It was conducted in three phases, which consisted of a situational analysis using qualitative methods (Phase 1), selecting an appropriate test through evaluating 4 candidate tests and the participatory design and implementation of an intervention(Phase 2), and an evaluation combining review of record tools, interviews, time motion study and estimating incremental costs (Phase 3). The conceptual framework draws on multilevel assessment (MLA), policy triangle framework, MRC framework for designing complex interventions and the Normalization Process Model (NPM). The findings suggested that an intervention that introduces point of care test for syphilis at antenatal care services is feasible, acceptable, and of comparable costs to HIV screening in pregnancy. Nonetheless, barriers identified by health workers need to be overcome.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • World Health Organization

    collaborator OTHER
  • African Population and Health Research Center

    collaborator OTHER
  • Institut de Recherche en Sciences de la Sante, Burkina Faso

    lead OTHER_GOV

Principal Investigators

  • Seni KOUANDA, PhD · Insitut de Recherche en Science de la santé

  • Fadima YAYA BOCOUM, PhD · Insitut de Recherche en Science de la santé

Eligibility

Min Age
18 Years
Sex
FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2013-05-01
Primary Completion
2013-09-30
Completion
2013-09-30

More Related Trials

Entities

Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT03156751 on ClinicalTrials.gov