Mentor Mothers (MMs) are peer supporters who help pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV (WLHIV) as they receive prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) services in resource-limited settings like Kenya. Differentiated service delivery (DSD) is a care model that tailors services based on clients' needs, helping to improve both the quality and efficiency of care. This hybrid implementation-effectiveness study will test whether an enhanced MM strategy that uses DSD can be successfully carried out and improve health outcomes for mothers and infants. The study will take place at Burnt Forest Sub-District Hospital (BFSDH) in Kenya. Researchers will ask: * Can the enhanced MM strategy be delivered as planned and accepted by patients and staff? * Does the strategy improve clinical outcomes like keeping mothers in PMTCT care, achieving HIV viral suppression, completing infant HIV testing, and preventing HIV transmission to infants? Researchers will compare health outcomes before and after the strategy is introduced at BFSDH, and also compare outcomes at other similar clinics that continue with standard MM services. Women who choose to participate will meet with a MM during their routine antenatal and postnatal clinic visits. They will be offered the enhanced MM support, but can choose to receive standard care if they prefer.
This is a hybrid implementation-effectiveness study of an enhanced Mentor Mother (MM) strategy for delivering risk-based, differentiated prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) services to pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV (WLHIV) and their infants. The study will be conducted at Burnt Forest Sub-District Hospital (BFSDH), an Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare (AMPATH)-supported public health facility in Uasin Gishu County, Kenya. Mentor Mothers (MMs) are peer advocates who support WLHIV in PMTCT programs, providing adherence counseling, psychosocial support, and retention assistance. Although MMs are a widely implemented, evidence-based intervention, current models generally do not differentiate services based on clients' individual risk profiles. The enhanced MM strategy evaluated in this study builds on the World Health Organization and Kenya Ministry of Health's recommendation for differentiated service delivery (DSD)-a patient-centered model that tailors services to individual needs. This study will evaluate implementation outcomes (feasibility, acceptability, fidelity) while also gathering preliminary clinical effectiveness data of the enhanced MM strategy. The strategy includes structured, iterative risk stratification by MMs and PMTCT clinicians at each clinical encounter to identify clients at higher risk for poor PMTCT outcomes. Identified risk factors include HIV viremia, stigma and non-disclosure, and socioeconomic barriers. Based on the identified risk(s), MMs will deliver individualized, problem-focused support. WLHIV with no identifiable risk factors will receive a less-intensive service schedule aligned with national differentiated care guidelines. Specific Aims: * Aim 1: Use a mixed-methods approach to evaluate fidelity, feasibility, and acceptability of the enhanced MM strategy over a 15-month period. Data will include quantitative fidelity checklists, MM activity logs, chart audits, observation logs, and stakeholder focus group discussions. * Aim 2: Assess preliminary effectiveness of the enhanced MM strategy on key maternal and infant outcomes using aggregate, routinely collected clinical data from AMPATH's medical record system. Outcomes include maternal retention in care, maternal HIV viral suppression, infant uptake of HIV diagnostic testing, and HIV vertical transmission. A within-site pre-post analysis will compare outcomes at BFSDH during the 12 months before and after implementation (excluding the first 3 months of roll out). A contemporaneous across-site analysis will compare outcomes at BFSDH (enhanced MM strategy) and three comparable clinics providing standard MM services during the same 12-month period. The study is supported by the NIH through a K23 award (K23HD109056), and builds on extensive formative research, including qualitative interviews and human-centered design workshops with WLHIV, MMs, PMTCT clinicians, and policymakers. Pilot implementation is being guided by local stakeholders and is expected to inform the design of a future pragmatic trial. The enhanced MM strategy, if successful, may provide a scalable model for improving PMTCT outcomes in resource-constrained settings.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
200
The enhanced Mentor Mother strategy introduces a structured approach to differentiated PMTCT support, led by trained peer counselors/Mentor Mothers (MM). Mentor Mothers will be trained on how to perform risk stratification, and they will use a standardized form to identify and document psychosocial and clinical risk factors. Based on these, MMs then deliver tailored interventions, including additional counseling, community outreach, and referrals. Fidelity assessments and a process of audit and feedback will be used to further refine the strategy, which builds on national differentiated service delivery guidelines and integrates into routine care without requiring added clinic staff.
Burnt Forest Sub-District Hospital
Burnt Forest, Uasin Gishu County, Kenya
RECRUITINGFidelity: Proportion of enhanced Mentor Mother strategy tasks completed and services correctly assigned/delivered, as assessed by checklists, audits, and observations.
Fidelity is defined as the degree to which an intervention is implemented as intended. In this study, fidelity to the enhanced Mentor Mother (MM) strategy will be assessed using quantitative (checklists, audits) and qualitative (observations, logs) methods. A checklist of essential tasks will quantify adherence to MM workflows, calculated as the proportion of tasks completed out of those intended. Audits of clinical records, screening tools, and MM logs will assess accuracy of risk-based service delivery, calculated as the proportion of correctly assigned and delivered services. Direct observations will assess the quality of MM service delivery, and content logs will capture which MM components are delivered and how participants respond.
Time frame: Fidelity to the enhanced MM strategy will be assessed throughout the 15-month implementation period, and a process of audit and feedback will be used to enhance fidelity and further refine the strategy.
Acceptability: Participant ratings of acceptability of the enhanced Mentor Mother strategy, assessed by AIM scores, satisfaction surveys, and focus group discussions.
Acceptability is the perception among implementation stakeholders that an intervention is agreeable or satisfactory. In this study, acceptability of the enhanced Mentor Mother (MM) strategy will be assessed using quantitative (questionnaires) and qualitative (focus group discussions) methods. The Acceptability of Intervention Measure (AIM) is a brief, validated questionnaire that will be administered to participants. A satisfaction survey will also be administered to identify parts of the strategy that cause frustration or other negative emotions and parts of the strategy that cause positive emotions. Results from AIM and satisfaction surveys will then be used to guide focus group discussions that will qualitatively assess perspectives about the acceptability of the enhanced MM strategy. Focus group discussions will be audio recorded, translated, and transcribed for thematic analysis.
Time frame: Acceptability of the enhanced MM strategy will be assessed at the end of the 15-month implementation period.
Feasibility: Participant ratings of feasibility of the enhanced Mentor Mother strategy, assessed by FIM scores and focus group discussions.
Feasibility is the extent to which an intervention can be successfully carried out within a given context. In this study, feasibility of the enhanced Mentor Mother (MM) strategy will be assessed using quantitative (questionnaires) and qualitative (focus group discussions) methods. The Feasibility of Intervention Measure (FIM) is a brief, validated questionnaire that will be administered to participants. Results from the FIM will then be used to guide focus group discussions that will qualitatively assess perspectives about the feasibility and readiness for scale-up of the enhanced MM strategy. Focus group discussions will be audio recorded, translated, and transcribed for thematic analysis.
Time frame: Feasibility of the enhanced MM strategy will be assessed at the end of the 15-month implementation period.
Proportion of mothers retained in care
Proportion of women living with HIV (WLHIV) enrolled in PMTCT services (those pregnant and ≤18 months postpartum) who were not lost to follow-up during the period of observation, excluding those who died or transferred out.
Time frame: Assessed at baseline (pre-implementation), 6-months (interim analysis), and at the end of the 15-month implementation period.
Proportion of mothers with HIV viral suppression
Proportion of WLHIV enrolled in PMTCT services who received antiretroviral therapy for at least 3 months, had at least one HIV viral load test, and never had a result \>200 copies/ml during the period of observation.
Time frame: Assessed at baseline (pre-implementation), 6-months (interim analysis), and at the end of the 15-month implementation period.
Proportion of mothers who died
Proportion of WLHIV enrolled in PMTCT services who died during the period of observation.
Time frame: Assessed at baseline (pre-implementation), 6-months (interim analysis), and at the end of the 15-month implementation period.
Proportion of mothers who transferred out
Proportion of WLHIV enrolled in PMTCT services who transferred to another clinic during the period of observation.
Time frame: Assessed at baseline (pre-implementation), 6-months (interim analysis), and at the end of the 15-month implementation period.
Proportion of infants receiving HIV diagnostic testing
Proportion of infants with perinatal HIV exposure (those 0-18 months of age) who had their first HIV test performed by 10 weeks of age during the period of observation.
Time frame: Assessed at baseline (pre-implementation), 6-months (interim analysis), and at the end of the 15-month implementation period.
Proportion of infants infected with HIV (vertical transmission)
Proportion of infants with perinatal HIV exposure with any positive HIV DNA PCR test result between 0-18 months of age during the month period of observation.
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Time frame: Assessed at baseline (pre-implementation), 6-months (interim analysis), and at the end of the 15-month implementation period.
Proportion of infants who died
Proportion of infants with perinatal HIV exposure who died during the period of observation.
Time frame: Assessed at baseline (pre-implementation), 6-months (interim analysis), and at the end of the 15-month implementation period.