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Comparison of door-to-door and fixed-point delivery of azithromycin distribution for child survival in Niger: A cluster-randomized trial

Recent evidence indicates mass azithromycin distribution reduces under-5 mortality. This intervention is being considered for child survival programs in high mortality sub-Saharan African settings. The delivery approach used in prior studies required a full-time census and distribution team, which i...

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Autores principales: Arzika, Ahmed M., Maliki, Ramatou, Amza, Abdou, Karamba, Alio, Gallo, Nasser, Aichatou, Bawa, Sara, Ismael Issa, Beidi, Diallo, Haroun, Laminou Maliki, Oumarou, Farissatou, Lebas, Elodie, Peterson, Brittany, Colby, Emily, Nguyen, William, Liu, Zijun, Fitzpatrick, Meagan C., Arnold, Benjamin F., Lietman, Thomas M., O’Brien, Kieran S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10651009/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37967058
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0002559
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author Arzika, Ahmed M.
Maliki, Ramatou
Amza, Abdou
Karamba, Alio
Gallo, Nasser
Aichatou, Bawa
Sara, Ismael Issa
Beidi, Diallo
Haroun, Laminou Maliki
Oumarou, Farissatou
Lebas, Elodie
Peterson, Brittany
Colby, Emily
Nguyen, William
Liu, Zijun
Fitzpatrick, Meagan C.
Arnold, Benjamin F.
Lietman, Thomas M.
O’Brien, Kieran S.
author_facet Arzika, Ahmed M.
Maliki, Ramatou
Amza, Abdou
Karamba, Alio
Gallo, Nasser
Aichatou, Bawa
Sara, Ismael Issa
Beidi, Diallo
Haroun, Laminou Maliki
Oumarou, Farissatou
Lebas, Elodie
Peterson, Brittany
Colby, Emily
Nguyen, William
Liu, Zijun
Fitzpatrick, Meagan C.
Arnold, Benjamin F.
Lietman, Thomas M.
O’Brien, Kieran S.
author_sort Arzika, Ahmed M.
collection PubMed
description Recent evidence indicates mass azithromycin distribution reduces under-5 mortality. This intervention is being considered for child survival programs in high mortality sub-Saharan African settings. The delivery approach used in prior studies required a full-time census and distribution team, which is not feasible for most programs. To determine the optimal programmatic approach to delivery, this study aimed to compare treatment coverage, costs, and acceptability of different delivery approaches with existing community health workers (CHWs). This cluster-randomized trial included rural and peri-urban communities in Dosso, Niger (clinicaltrials.gov, NCT04774991). A random sample of 80 eligible communities was randomized 1:1 to biannual door-to-door or fixed-point delivery of oral azithromycin to children 1–59 months old over 1 year. Data analysts alone were masked given the nature of the intervention. The primary outcome was community-level treatment coverage defined as the number of children treated recorded by CHWs divided by the number of eligible children determined using a post-distribution census. Costs were monitored through routine administrative data collection and micro-costing. The census included survey questions on intervention acceptability among caregivers, community leaders, and CHWs. After randomization, 1 community was excluded due to inaccuracies in available administrative data, resulting in 39 communities receiving door-to-door delivery. At the second distribution, community-level mean treatment coverage was 105% (SD 44%) in the door-to-door arm and 92% (SD 20%) in the fixed-point arm (Mean difference 13%, 95% CI -2% to 28%, P-value = 0.08). The total cost per dose delivered was $1.91 in the door-to-door arm and $2.51 in the fixed-point arm. Indicators of acceptability were similar across stakeholder groups in both arms, with most respondents in each group indicating a preference for door-to-door. Overall, door-to-door delivery is the preferred approach to azithromycin distribution in this setting and might reach more children at a lower cost per dose delivered than fixed-point. Trial Registration: clinicaltrials.gov NCT04774991.
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spelling pubmed-106510092023-11-15 Comparison of door-to-door and fixed-point delivery of azithromycin distribution for child survival in Niger: A cluster-randomized trial Arzika, Ahmed M. Maliki, Ramatou Amza, Abdou Karamba, Alio Gallo, Nasser Aichatou, Bawa Sara, Ismael Issa Beidi, Diallo Haroun, Laminou Maliki Oumarou, Farissatou Lebas, Elodie Peterson, Brittany Colby, Emily Nguyen, William Liu, Zijun Fitzpatrick, Meagan C. Arnold, Benjamin F. Lietman, Thomas M. O’Brien, Kieran S. PLOS Glob Public Health Research Article Recent evidence indicates mass azithromycin distribution reduces under-5 mortality. This intervention is being considered for child survival programs in high mortality sub-Saharan African settings. The delivery approach used in prior studies required a full-time census and distribution team, which is not feasible for most programs. To determine the optimal programmatic approach to delivery, this study aimed to compare treatment coverage, costs, and acceptability of different delivery approaches with existing community health workers (CHWs). This cluster-randomized trial included rural and peri-urban communities in Dosso, Niger (clinicaltrials.gov, NCT04774991). A random sample of 80 eligible communities was randomized 1:1 to biannual door-to-door or fixed-point delivery of oral azithromycin to children 1–59 months old over 1 year. Data analysts alone were masked given the nature of the intervention. The primary outcome was community-level treatment coverage defined as the number of children treated recorded by CHWs divided by the number of eligible children determined using a post-distribution census. Costs were monitored through routine administrative data collection and micro-costing. The census included survey questions on intervention acceptability among caregivers, community leaders, and CHWs. After randomization, 1 community was excluded due to inaccuracies in available administrative data, resulting in 39 communities receiving door-to-door delivery. At the second distribution, community-level mean treatment coverage was 105% (SD 44%) in the door-to-door arm and 92% (SD 20%) in the fixed-point arm (Mean difference 13%, 95% CI -2% to 28%, P-value = 0.08). The total cost per dose delivered was $1.91 in the door-to-door arm and $2.51 in the fixed-point arm. Indicators of acceptability were similar across stakeholder groups in both arms, with most respondents in each group indicating a preference for door-to-door. Overall, door-to-door delivery is the preferred approach to azithromycin distribution in this setting and might reach more children at a lower cost per dose delivered than fixed-point. Trial Registration: clinicaltrials.gov NCT04774991. Public Library of Science 2023-11-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10651009/ /pubmed/37967058 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0002559 Text en © 2023 Arzika et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Arzika, Ahmed M.
Maliki, Ramatou
Amza, Abdou
Karamba, Alio
Gallo, Nasser
Aichatou, Bawa
Sara, Ismael Issa
Beidi, Diallo
Haroun, Laminou Maliki
Oumarou, Farissatou
Lebas, Elodie
Peterson, Brittany
Colby, Emily
Nguyen, William
Liu, Zijun
Fitzpatrick, Meagan C.
Arnold, Benjamin F.
Lietman, Thomas M.
O’Brien, Kieran S.
Comparison of door-to-door and fixed-point delivery of azithromycin distribution for child survival in Niger: A cluster-randomized trial
title Comparison of door-to-door and fixed-point delivery of azithromycin distribution for child survival in Niger: A cluster-randomized trial
title_full Comparison of door-to-door and fixed-point delivery of azithromycin distribution for child survival in Niger: A cluster-randomized trial
title_fullStr Comparison of door-to-door and fixed-point delivery of azithromycin distribution for child survival in Niger: A cluster-randomized trial
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of door-to-door and fixed-point delivery of azithromycin distribution for child survival in Niger: A cluster-randomized trial
title_short Comparison of door-to-door and fixed-point delivery of azithromycin distribution for child survival in Niger: A cluster-randomized trial
title_sort comparison of door-to-door and fixed-point delivery of azithromycin distribution for child survival in niger: a cluster-randomized trial
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10651009/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37967058
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0002559
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