1 / 19

New evidence on intervention efficacy & effectiveness

New evidence on intervention efficacy & effectiveness. Betty Kirkwood London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. Is there any major new evidence concerning interventions to improve newborn and child survival that adds to or changes our current thinking?. Thanks to.

vesta
Download Presentation

New evidence on intervention efficacy & effectiveness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. New evidence on intervention efficacy & effectiveness Betty Kirkwood London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

  2. Is there any major new evidence concerning interventions to improve newborn and child survival that adds to or changes our current thinking? Thanks to

  3. Evidence-based Interventions • Lancet Bellagio Child Survival Series 2003 23 interventions • 15 preventive (9 child, 6 newborn) • 8 case-management (6 child, 2 newborn) • Lancet Neonatal Series 2005 8 additional “cost-effective” interventions

  4. Is there new evidence: • that significantly changes our assessment about the potential impact or delivery of any of the 31 interventions? • for new intervention(s) to be added? • about effective delivery strategies?

  5. NEW evidence re 31 interventions: ANTIBIOTICS FOR PNEUMONIA • Current guidelines • Non-severe pneumonia: treat at home with oral antibiotics • Severe pneumonia: admit & give parenteral antibiotics • Oral amoxycillin as effective as injectable penicillin: multi-centre trial • Potential benefits include decreases in: • Risk of needle-borne infections • Need for referral or admission • Administration costs • Costs to the family Addo-Yobo et al for the Amoxicillin Penicillin Pneumonia International Study (APPIS) Group, Lancet 2004; 364: 1141–48

  6. NEW evidence re 31 interventions: EARLY INITIATION OF BREASTFEEDING Ghana: Risk of Neonatal Mortality after 1st day Various measures taken to address potential reverse causality POSTERS 20 & 21

  7. NEW evidence re 31 interventions: EARLY INITIATION OF BREASTFEEDING • 60 priority countries • Two intervention models: • A: BF initiated within 1st hour • B: BF initiated within 1st day • (but not necessarily 1st hour)

  8. NEW evidence re 31 interventions: • HANDWASHING • Meta-analysis 11 studies: 37% reduction in diarrhoea (CI 23-48%) (Fewtrell et al, Lancet Inf Dis 2005; 5: 42-52) • A randomised controlled trial of handwashing on child health in Karachi, Pakistan Luby et al, Lancet 2005; 366: 225–33

  9. New intervention to add? RUTF (highly fortified Ready to Use Therapeutic Foods) for community-based management of SEVERE MALNUTRITION ISSUE: • 10 million children severely malnourished, High risk of mortality • Usual recommendation: refer to hospital or specialised treatment unit • Coverage low CONSULTATION (WHO, UNICEF, SCF; Geneva 21-23 Nov 2005): • Community based approach with RUTF feasible & effective • Very low case fatality rate • Only a small proportion of severely malnourised children needed to be referred to hospital • Potential to save 100,000’s child deaths • YES: STRONG EVIDENCE

  10. New intervention to add? Cotrimoxazole prophylaxis for children with clinical signs of HIV

  11. New intervention to add? Chlorhexidine Cleansing: Nepal • A single cleansing of newborn skin as soon as possible after delivery (median 6 h): • 28% reduction in mortality among LBW infants • Cleansing umbilical cord with 4% chlorhexidine on days 0,1,2,3,5,7,9: • 24% reduction in overall neonatal mortality (Lancet in press) Courtesy Darmstadt & colleagues POSTERS 39 & 41

  12. New VACCINES to add? TO CONSIDER: • Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (3 doses): The Gambia: 16% reduction in mortality (CI 3-28%) Cutts et al, The Lancet 2005; 365: 1139-46 Issues: Affordability, Availability, Composition NOT YET: • Rotavirus: • High efficacy LA/US • Trials needed in less developed countries • Malaria RTS,S/AS02A vaccine: The Gambia: 58% reduction in severe malaria (CI 16-81%) Alonso et al, Lancet 2004; 364: 1411–20

  13. NEWevidence re effective delivery WOMEN’S GROUPS: Makwanpur Effect of a participatory intervention with women’s groups on birth outcomes in Nepal: cluster RCT(Manandhar et al, Lancet 2004) 0·70 [95% CI 0·53–0·94]) >6000 deliveries 12 pairs

  14. NEWevidence re effective delivery NEWBORN CARE HOME VISITS: Shivgarh Shivgarh (India): Impact of 4 home visits by CHWs to PROMOTE ESSENTIAL NEWBORN CARE* through Community Mobilization & Behavior Change Communications POSTER *As defined in Lancet Neonatal Survival Series paper 2: Lancet 2005;365:977-88.

  15. COMPLEMENTARY FEEDING PERU: Educational intervention delivered through health services RCT: Government health facilities (6 intervention, 6 control) Aim of intervention: enhance quality & coverage of existing nutrition education & introduce accrediation system Evaluation: Birth cohort, 187 infants NEWevidence re effective delivery OR 3.04 (CI 1.21-7.64)

  16. Intervention to reconsider? Zanzibar: Pemba RCT (IFA, IFA+zinc, Zinc, Placebo) • IFA arms stopped because adverse effects • Adverse events: 12% higher, CI=2 to 23%, P=0.02 • Deaths: 15% higher, CI=-7 to 41%, P=0.19 • “Current guidelines for universal IFA supplementation should be reconsidered” Sazawal et al, Lancet in press PROPHYLACTIC IRON SUPPLEMENTS IN MALARIA ENDEMIC AREAS

  17. Coming soon • Impact of routine zinc supplements on child mortality • RESULTS from 2 trials in Pemba & Nepal • Next 6 months

  18. NEW evidence: IMPLICATIONS • ADD IMMEDIATELY • RUTF for severely malnourished children • Oral amoxycillin for pneumonia • Cotrimoxazole prophylaxis for HIV+ children • Indicator for handwashing • CONSIDER • Newborn skin/cord cleansing • Pneumococcal vaccine • GET MORE EVIDENCE • Early initiation of BF & neonatal mortality • IF Ghana findings replicated, ADD to list

  19. NEW evidence: IMPLICATIONS • Reconsider Iron Guidelines • EVALUATING INTERVENTIONS IS ESSENTIAL, as is monitoring outcomes after implementation • Evidence supports increased emphasis on community-based involvement • NEED: Evidence on scaling up

More Related