The purpose of this study is to determine the effectiveness of an innovative methodology for training Community Health Workers that will improve their effectiveness in educating mothers to adopt best practice health behaviors in the home.
Objective: Training of community health workers (CHW) is a growing priority to close the gap between health services and mothers/families in resource poor communities. To address research needs on how to improve effectiveness of CHW training, the investigators tested an innovative CHW teaching methodology called "Sharing Histories" hypothesizing that this would empower and enable CHW to better teach mothers to improve health knowledge and behaviors that contribute to improved child growth. Method: The study was a cluster-randomized controlled trial: 22 health facility jurisdictions were matched and randomly assigned as experimental or control. Health personnel Tutors and female CHW were trained using either the "Sharing Histories" methodology (experimental) or a standard but still participatory teaching method (control). Training content, materials, and other interventions were held constant between study groups. Impact on maternal knowledge and practices, and child growth and morbidity were measured in representative household surveys at baseline, midterm, and final evaluation, with 600 mothers interviewed - 300 in each study group - at each point in time.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
600
Female Community Health Worker training participants were led through a guided process of recalling and sharing their autobiographical memories of their personal experiences in the first 1000 days of each of their children (pregnancy, childbirth, postpartum, newborn, breastfeeding, complementary feeding, infant diarrhea and hygiene, pneumonia). On the basis of memories, cultural beliefs and practices are identified and training content is built.
Female Community Health Workers were trained with standard participatory teaching method with three phases: identify knowledge, provide new knowledge, evaluate learning.
Change in rate of stunting in children under two years of age (birth to 23.9 months of age)
Stunting is defined as low height-for-age less than -2 z-scores from the median on the World Health Organization growth standard, 2006.
Time frame: Chidren born up to 24 months prior to the baseline survey in 2010. Children born up to 24 months prior to the final survey in 2014
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