This study aims to examine how to implement a gender-transformative post-partum family planning program integrated into community-based infant vaccination services, and to evaluate preliminary effectiveness of this approach on postpartum contraceptive use in a low resource, rural setting.
Using effective postpartum contraception allows postpartum people to prevent short inter-pregnancy intervals which are associated with an increased risk of maternal and infant morbidity and mortality. India is the country with the highest number of women with an unmet need for contraception, and postpartum and rural women are those with the greatest need. Uptake of postpartum contraception among women in rural India is low; less than half of postpartum women use contraception within the first year after delivery, and many births do not follow the recommended interval. A promising intervention to address barriers to family planning care is to build on an existing successful health program, the infant vaccination program, by linking family planning services with infant vaccination. India's Ministry of Health has promoted community-based delivery of infant vaccinations, and monthly childhood vaccination services are offered at Village Health and Nutrition Days typically held at Anganwadi Community Centers. Six-week vaccination rates are high, indicating that these services are routinely used by families of young infants, which provides an opportunity to reach postpartum women simultaneously. This programming addresses gender-inequitable social norms and has shown to facilitate more successful family planning intervention but has not been studied among postpartum women. This study will adapt a gender-transformative family planning intervention to support community-based delivery of family planning with infant vaccination; this intervention has the potential to increase family planning use among postpartum women with unmet need in low-resources and rural settings. This is a two-arm, cluster randomized-trial where postpartum women will be assigned to participation in the linked care model (PIVoT) or the standard of care (referring women to public health centers for family planning counseling and contraceptive provision). The study team will enroll 286 women in the study, 143 in each the intervention and control arms. Randomization will occur at the subcenter level. Participants will be recruited among postpartum women presenting for infant vaccination services at VHND. Follow-up will occur with women at 6 months and 12 months postpartum and outcomes will be assessed via tablet-based surveys. In addition, a total of 40 in-depth interviews will take place with a group of PIVoT intervention participants, their husbands, and health care providers who delivered the program after completion of the study for further evaluation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
293
The PIVoT intervention is a 30-minute focused information exchange that supports shared contraceptive decision making. The program includes a gender-equity and family planning curriculum covering basic family planning information as well as gender norms and son preference and interactive family planning method index cards (detailing method characteristics, use, duration of action, efficacy, side effects, and contraindications for each method). The program is designed to support person-centered contraceptive choice and encourages women to consider joint family planning decision-making with male partners. If a contraceptive method is desired, it will be provided by nurses who are trained to provide comprehensive family planning care.
University of California, San Diego
La Jolla, California, United States
Junnar Taluka
Pune, Maharashtra, India
Proportion of women using modern contraception at 6 months postpartum
Contraceptive use will be measured through a self-reported survey collected at 6 months postpartum.
Time frame: 6 months after delivery
Feasibility, acceptability and appropriateness of the PiVOT intervention (quantitative)
Self-reported survey questions using validated items regarding feasibility, acceptability and appropriateness of linked care will be collected at 6 months postpartum. Participants will rate the 3 constructs using 12 items comprising 3 4-item scales with a 5-point Likert scale: completely agree=1, agree=2, neither agree nor disagree=3, disagree=4, completely disagree=5. Higher scores on these items reflect more supportive attitudes toward the linked care model.
Time frame: 6 months after delivery
Proportion of women using modern contraception at 12 months postpartum
Contraceptive use will be measured through a self-reported survey collected at 12 months postpartum
Time frame: 12 months after delivery
Feasibility, acceptability and appropriateness of the PiVOT intervention (qualitative) among participants
In-depth interviews with a portion of PiVOT intervention participants
Time frame: 6 months postpartum
Feasibility, acceptability and appropriateness of the PiVOT intervention (qualitative) among providers of the program
In-depth interviews with health care providers who delivered the PIVoT intervention after completion of the research study to further understand this outcome using qualitative data.
Time frame: 6 months postpartum
Feasibility, acceptability and appropriateness of the PiVOT intervention (qualitative) among husbands of participants
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In-depth interviews with husbands of participants (if recommended by their wife) after completion of the research study to further understand this outcome using qualitative data.
Time frame: 6 months postpartum