Testing the Impact of Family-Based Intervention to Improve Developmental and Health Outcomes for Female Adolescents
NCT07278934 · Status: RECRUITING · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 1920
Last updated 2026-04-13
Summary
This study seeks to address the urgent need for theoretically and empirically informed interventions that would address the increasing numbers of unaccompanied minors migrating from rural to urban centers in developing countries for better economic opportunities. This process often results in hazardous child labor defined as work that is mentally, physically, socially or morally dangerous and harmful; interfering with schooling and health and mental health functioning, and leading to several other disproportionate risks. Unaccompanied migrant child laborers' vulnerability is further intensified by the lack of parental protection and community belonging in the host urban center. The International Labor Organization (ILO) estimates that 9.6% of children (ages 5 to 17) across the globe are child laborers and draws attention to migrant child laborers as an underreported and highly vulnerable group, a significant portion of which are female with no education. Poverty has been identified as the main driver of child labor, with family context also being a critical contributing factor. Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) has the highest rates of child labor (24%), with Ghana -the focus of this study- registering one of the highest child labor prevalence at 22%, including unaccompanied child migrant laborers. In Ghana, unaccompanied adolescent girls migrate from the Northern region to urban centers in the south to work in the informal economy. Load carrying is the most common type of labor for this population and exposes migrant girls to multiple developmental and health risks. Building on the recently concluded R21 study (with 97 adolescent girls aged 11 to 14 years and their caregivers) that showed high feasibility and acceptability, and promising preliminary impact of the ANZANSI (resilience in Dagbani -local language) combination intervention in the same region, we propose to test its effectiveness in a larger two-arm cluster randomized clinical trial among 960 adolescent girls (age 11 to 14 years) at risk of school dropout nested within 32 public junior high schools in the Northern region of Ghana and their caregivers. The schools will be randomly assigned to one of two study conditions: 1) ANZANSI (FEE+MFG) and 2) bolstered usual care. The intervention will be delivered for 12 months, with assessments conducted at baseline and at 12-, 24-, and 36-month follow-ups post-intervention initiation. The study specific aims are: Aim 1: Examine the short- and medium-term impacts of ANZANSI intervention on the incidence of unaccompanied migration for child labor (primary outcome), and academic progress and psychosocial outcomes (secondary); Aim 2: Examine the impact of the ANZANSI intervention on potential mechanisms of change at the individual, family, and community levels; Aim 3: Evaluate the cost and cost-effectiveness of each intervention condition; and Aim 4: Qualitatively examine participants, facilitators, and school leadership's experiences with the intervention.
Conditions
- Unaccompanied Migration
Interventions
- BEHAVIORAL
-
ANZANSI Family Program
Family Economic Empowerment: 1) Financial literacy training: Four 1-2 hour workshop sessions focused on financial literacy will be delivered. 2) CDA. Each participant receives a CDA, a matched savings account. Participants' family members, relatives, or friends are allowed and encouraged to contribute towards the CDA. The account is then matched with money from the project. The match cap is an equivalent of US$10 per month; 3) The family income-generating activity (IGA): Participants are trained on IGAs and expected to use part of their matched savings to start an IGA. Multiple Family Groups. The manualized 16-session intervention is organized around 4Rs (Rules, Responsibility, Relationships, and Respectful Communication) and 2Ss (Stress and Social Support). Children and caregivers complete activities together or split to reconvene later for discussing as a larger group. Each group involves 7 to 10 families, with at least two generations of a family present in each session.
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
University of Ghana
collaborator OTHER -
Washington University School of Medicine
collaborator OTHER -
New York University
lead OTHER
Study Design
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- PREVENTION
- Masking
- NONE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 11 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- Yes
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2026-04-07
- Primary Completion
- 2030-08-15
- Completion
- 2030-08-15
Countries
- Ghana
Study Locations
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