Cargando…

Early care and support for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in Uganda: The Baby Ubuntu feasibility trial

BACKGROUND: Early care and support provision for young children with developmental disabilities is frequently lacking, yet has potential to improve child and family outcomes, and is crucial for promoting access to healthcare and early education. We evaluated the feasibility, acceptability, early evi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nanyunja, Carol, Sadoo, Samantha, Kohli-Lynch, Maya, Nalugya, Ruth, Nyonyintono, James, Muhumuza, Anita, Katumba, Kenneth R., Trautner, Emily, Magnusson, Brooke, Kabugo, Daniel, Cowan, Frances M., Zuurmond, Maria, Morgan, Catherine, Lester, Deborah, Seeley, Janet, Webb, Emily L., Otai, Christine, Greco, Giulia, Nampijja, Margaret, Tann, Cally J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9513138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36177453
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.981976
_version_ 1784797989747818496
author Nanyunja, Carol
Sadoo, Samantha
Kohli-Lynch, Maya
Nalugya, Ruth
Nyonyintono, James
Muhumuza, Anita
Katumba, Kenneth R.
Trautner, Emily
Magnusson, Brooke
Kabugo, Daniel
Cowan, Frances M.
Zuurmond, Maria
Morgan, Catherine
Lester, Deborah
Seeley, Janet
Webb, Emily L.
Otai, Christine
Greco, Giulia
Nampijja, Margaret
Tann, Cally J.
author_facet Nanyunja, Carol
Sadoo, Samantha
Kohli-Lynch, Maya
Nalugya, Ruth
Nyonyintono, James
Muhumuza, Anita
Katumba, Kenneth R.
Trautner, Emily
Magnusson, Brooke
Kabugo, Daniel
Cowan, Frances M.
Zuurmond, Maria
Morgan, Catherine
Lester, Deborah
Seeley, Janet
Webb, Emily L.
Otai, Christine
Greco, Giulia
Nampijja, Margaret
Tann, Cally J.
author_sort Nanyunja, Carol
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Early care and support provision for young children with developmental disabilities is frequently lacking, yet has potential to improve child and family outcomes, and is crucial for promoting access to healthcare and early education. We evaluated the feasibility, acceptability, early evidence of impact and provider costs of the Baby Ubuntu participatory, peer-facilitated, group program for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in Uganda. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A feasibility trial, with two parallel groups, compared Baby Ubuntu with standard care. Caregivers and children, aged 6–11 months with moderate-severe neurodevelopmental impairment, were recruited and followed for 12 months. Quantitative and qualitative methods captured information on feasibility (ability to recruit), acceptability (satisfactory attendance), preliminary evidence of impact (family quality of life) and provider costs. RESULTS: One hundred twenty-six infants (median developmental quotient, 28.7) were recruited and randomized (63 per arm) over 9 months, demonstrating feasibility; 101 (80%) completed the 12-month follow-up assessment (9 died, 12 were lost to follow up, 4 withdrew). Of 63 randomized to the intervention, 59 survived (93%); of these, 51 (86%) attended ≥6 modules meeting acceptability criteria, and 49 (83%) completed the 12 month follow-up assessment. Qualitatively, Baby Ubuntu was feasible and acceptable to caregivers and facilitators. Enabling factors included community sensitization by local champions, positive and caring attitudes of facilitators toward children with disability, peer support, and the participatory approach to learning. Among 101 (86%) surviving children seen at 12 months, mixed methods evaluation provided qualitative evidence of impact on family knowledge, skills, and attitudes, however impact on a scored family quality of life tool was inconclusive. Barriers included stigma and exclusion, poverty, and the need to manage expectations around the child’s progress. Total provider cost for delivering the program per participant was USD 232. CONCLUSION: A pilot feasibility trial of the Baby Ubuntu program found it to be feasible and acceptable to children, caregivers and healthcare workers in Uganda. A mixed methods evaluation provided rich programmatic learning including qualitative, but not quantitative, evidence of impact. The cost estimate represents a feasible intervention for this vulnerable group, encouraging financial sustainability at scale. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: [https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN44380971], identifier [ISRCTN44380971].
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9513138
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-95131382022-09-28 Early care and support for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in Uganda: The Baby Ubuntu feasibility trial Nanyunja, Carol Sadoo, Samantha Kohli-Lynch, Maya Nalugya, Ruth Nyonyintono, James Muhumuza, Anita Katumba, Kenneth R. Trautner, Emily Magnusson, Brooke Kabugo, Daniel Cowan, Frances M. Zuurmond, Maria Morgan, Catherine Lester, Deborah Seeley, Janet Webb, Emily L. Otai, Christine Greco, Giulia Nampijja, Margaret Tann, Cally J. Front Pediatr Pediatrics BACKGROUND: Early care and support provision for young children with developmental disabilities is frequently lacking, yet has potential to improve child and family outcomes, and is crucial for promoting access to healthcare and early education. We evaluated the feasibility, acceptability, early evidence of impact and provider costs of the Baby Ubuntu participatory, peer-facilitated, group program for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in Uganda. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A feasibility trial, with two parallel groups, compared Baby Ubuntu with standard care. Caregivers and children, aged 6–11 months with moderate-severe neurodevelopmental impairment, were recruited and followed for 12 months. Quantitative and qualitative methods captured information on feasibility (ability to recruit), acceptability (satisfactory attendance), preliminary evidence of impact (family quality of life) and provider costs. RESULTS: One hundred twenty-six infants (median developmental quotient, 28.7) were recruited and randomized (63 per arm) over 9 months, demonstrating feasibility; 101 (80%) completed the 12-month follow-up assessment (9 died, 12 were lost to follow up, 4 withdrew). Of 63 randomized to the intervention, 59 survived (93%); of these, 51 (86%) attended ≥6 modules meeting acceptability criteria, and 49 (83%) completed the 12 month follow-up assessment. Qualitatively, Baby Ubuntu was feasible and acceptable to caregivers and facilitators. Enabling factors included community sensitization by local champions, positive and caring attitudes of facilitators toward children with disability, peer support, and the participatory approach to learning. Among 101 (86%) surviving children seen at 12 months, mixed methods evaluation provided qualitative evidence of impact on family knowledge, skills, and attitudes, however impact on a scored family quality of life tool was inconclusive. Barriers included stigma and exclusion, poverty, and the need to manage expectations around the child’s progress. Total provider cost for delivering the program per participant was USD 232. CONCLUSION: A pilot feasibility trial of the Baby Ubuntu program found it to be feasible and acceptable to children, caregivers and healthcare workers in Uganda. A mixed methods evaluation provided rich programmatic learning including qualitative, but not quantitative, evidence of impact. The cost estimate represents a feasible intervention for this vulnerable group, encouraging financial sustainability at scale. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: [https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN44380971], identifier [ISRCTN44380971]. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-09-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9513138/ /pubmed/36177453 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.981976 Text en Copyright © 2022 Nanyunja, Sadoo, Kohli-Lynch, Nalugya, Nyonyintono, Muhumuza, Katumba, Trautner, Magnusson, Kabugo, Cowan, Zuurmond, Morgan, Lester, Seeley, Webb, Otai, Greco, Nampijja and Tann. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pediatrics
Nanyunja, Carol
Sadoo, Samantha
Kohli-Lynch, Maya
Nalugya, Ruth
Nyonyintono, James
Muhumuza, Anita
Katumba, Kenneth R.
Trautner, Emily
Magnusson, Brooke
Kabugo, Daniel
Cowan, Frances M.
Zuurmond, Maria
Morgan, Catherine
Lester, Deborah
Seeley, Janet
Webb, Emily L.
Otai, Christine
Greco, Giulia
Nampijja, Margaret
Tann, Cally J.
Early care and support for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in Uganda: The Baby Ubuntu feasibility trial
title Early care and support for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in Uganda: The Baby Ubuntu feasibility trial
title_full Early care and support for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in Uganda: The Baby Ubuntu feasibility trial
title_fullStr Early care and support for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in Uganda: The Baby Ubuntu feasibility trial
title_full_unstemmed Early care and support for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in Uganda: The Baby Ubuntu feasibility trial
title_short Early care and support for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in Uganda: The Baby Ubuntu feasibility trial
title_sort early care and support for young children with developmental disabilities and their caregivers in uganda: the baby ubuntu feasibility trial
topic Pediatrics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9513138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36177453
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.981976
work_keys_str_mv AT nanyunjacarol earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT sadoosamantha earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT kohlilynchmaya earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT nalugyaruth earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT nyonyintonojames earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT muhumuzaanita earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT katumbakennethr earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT trautneremily earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT magnussonbrooke earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT kabugodaniel earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT cowanfrancesm earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT zuurmondmaria earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT morgancatherine earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT lesterdeborah earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT seeleyjanet earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT webbemilyl earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT otaichristine earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT grecogiulia earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT nampijjamargaret earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial
AT tanncallyj earlycareandsupportforyoungchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisabilitiesandtheircaregiversinugandathebabyubuntufeasibilitytrial