# Maternal and child health intervention to promote behaviour change: a population-level cluster-randomised controlled trial in Honduras

**Authors:** William Oles, Marcus Alexander, Rennie Negron, Jennifer Nelson, Emma Iriarte, Edoardo M. Airoldi, Nicholas A. Christakis, Laura Forastiere

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-060784 · BMJ Open · 2024-06-10

## TL;DR

A home-based counseling program in Honduras improved newborn care practices and knowledge among parents.

## Contribution

A population-level cluster-randomized trial demonstrated the effectiveness of home-based counseling on maternal and child health behaviors.

## Key findings

- Parents were more likely to seek health facility care for newborns within three days of birth.
- Fewer parents wrapped a fajero around the umbilical cord in the first week after birth.
- Parents were more likely to report immediate breastfeeding after birth.

## Abstract

To assess the efficacy of a sustained educational intervention to affect diverse outcomes across the pregnancy and infancy timeline.

A multi-arm cluster-randomised controlled trial in 99 villages in Honduras’ Copán region, involving 16 301 people in 5633 households from October 2015 to December 2019.

Residents aged 12 and older were eligible. A photographic census involved 93% of the population, with 13 881 and 10 263 individuals completing baseline and endline surveys, respectively.

22-month household-based counselling intervention aiming to improve practices, knowledge and attitudes related to maternal, neonatal and child health.

Primary outcomes were prenatal/postnatal care behaviours, facility births, exclusive breast feeding, parental involvement, treatment of diarrhoea and respiratory illness, reproductive health, and gender/reproductive norms. Secondary outcomes were knowledge and attitudes related to the primary outcomes.

Parents targeted for the intervention were 16.4% (95% CI 3.1%–29.8%, p=0.016) more likely to have their newborn’s health checked in a health facility within 3 days of birth; 19.6% (95% CI 4.2%–35.1%, p=0.013) more likely to not wrap a fajero around the umbilical cord in the first week after birth; and 8.9% (95% CI 0.3%–17.5%, p=0.043) more likely to report that the mother breast fed immediately after birth. Changes in knowledge and attitudes related to these primary outcomes were also observed. We found no significant effect on various other practices.

A sustained counselling intervention delivered in the home setting by community health workers can meaningfully change practices, knowledge and attitudes related to proper newborn care following birth, including professional care-seeking, umbilical cord care and breast feeding.

NCT02694679.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** diarrhoea (MESH:D003967), respiratory illness (MESH:D012140)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

32 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11168147/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11168147