Effectiveness of trained religious leaders’ engagement in maternal health education on improving maternal health service utilizations: Protocol of cluster randomized controlled trial in Hadiya Zone, Southern Ethiopia
Abinet Arega Sadore, Yohannes Kebede, Zewdie Birhanu

TL;DR
This study tests if training religious leaders to promote maternal health education improves health service use in Ethiopia.
Contribution
This is one of the first trials to evaluate the role of trained religious leaders in improving maternal health service utilization.
Findings
A cluster-randomized trial will assess maternal health service use after religious leader engagement.
Baseline and post-intervention data will evaluate knowledge of danger signs and service utilization.
Qualitative analysis will explore perceptions and attitudes toward maternal health services.
Abstract
Despite the many supply- and demand-side interventions aimed at increasing uptake of maternal health service utilizations, the maternal and new-born health service utilizations remains low. Religious leaders have the power to inhibit or facilitate effective adoption of maternal health service utilizations to promote maternal health. However, evidence on the roles of religious leaders in promoting maternal health in developing world is not fully known. Therefore this cluster-randomized trial is designed to evaluate the effects of trained religious leaders’ engagement in maternal health education in improving maternal health service utilization and knowledge of obstetric danger signs. A community based cluster randomized control trial in which the study kebeles are randomly assigned into intervention and control groups will be conducted. The sample size is calculated using stata…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Maternal and Child Health · Child Nutrition and Water Access · Food Security and Health in Diverse Populations
