Given the high rate of delayed adoption of antenatal care (ANC), and high rates of unintended pregnancy and unsafe abortion in Uganda, research on the period of time before confirmation of pregnancy is critical to understand underlying beliefs that guide behaviors ultimately important for maternal and neonatal health (UDHS, 2011; Hussain, 2013). Home pregnancy tests - which now cost less than 10 cents each - have the potential to facilitate FP uptake and significantly improve reproductive, maternal and child health outcomes in sub-Saharan Africa, including Uganda. These tests are easy to administer, disposable, inexpensive, and have a low false positive rate. Yet, for women living in rural areas in sub-Saharan countries, these tests are typically unavailable outside of health centers or they are prohibitively expensive. This study will investigate women's underlying beliefs about pregnancy status and examine how providing access to home-based pregnancy tests - thus facilitating earlier resolution of uncertainty of pregnancy status - influences such beliefs and decisions to take up family planning (FP) or seek appropriate pregnancy services. The results will inform the design of a larger study in the future.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
600
Among respondents who are randomly selected to receive a free home pregnancy test service, they will be offered the chance to take the test in the presence of the enumerator. Specifically, this would mean they would be given a cup to collect a sample of urine. The respondent would do so privately, then bring the cup back to the enumerator who would dip the home pregnancy tests and assist with interpreting the result. However, respondents can decline to take the test with the enumerator. Treatment assignment will be stratified by whether respondent use modern family planning at baseline.
We will provide a free pregnancy tests in for the future use, they are randomly selected from intervention #1 treatment group.
Ichuli Institute
Kampala, Uganda
Binary measures for the family planning take up
Use of any modern family planning method, use of oral contraceptives, use of injectables, use of short-acting reversible methods, use of long-acting reversible methods. We will measure take up as binary variables. We will also conduct sub-group analyses among women who are not using modern family planning at baseline and among women who are using modern family planning at baseline
Time frame: At end line survey, half a year after intervention
Binary measure of purchase of pregnancy test kit by price
Binary measures for the purchase of pregnancy test kit after baseline. Demand for pregnancy test kit is computed by Becker-DeGroot-Marschak (BDM) or/and Take it or leave it (TIOLI) method. We will also conduct sub-group analyses among women who are not using modern family planning at baseline and among women who are using modern family planning at baseline
Time frame: At end line survey, half a year after intervention
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