Implementation research on enhanced community case management of pneumonia in Bangladesh: study protocol
Shafiqul Ameen, Sadman Sowmik Sarkar, Mahin Bin Hamid, Md Ishtiak Anam Nobel, Sabit Saad Shafiq, Md Al-Mahmud, Azim Uddin AFM, Abid Anwar, Md Dudu Mia, Sharif Uddin Lotus, Anisuddin Ahmed, Hasan lbna Amin, Husam Md Shah Alam, Ashfia Saberin, Palash Kumar Saha, Sabina Ashrafee

TL;DR
This study aims to test how to better manage childhood pneumonia in Bangladesh by integrating improved treatment protocols into existing government health systems.
Contribution
The study introduces a new approach to integrate enhanced pneumonia management into routine government health systems in Bangladesh.
Findings
The study will evaluate the feasibility of integrating EMPIC into community clinics using a structured implementation framework.
It will assess treatment coverage, failure rates, and health worker knowledge in managing childhood pneumonia.
Findings may guide scaling up improved pneumonia management in low- and middle-income countries.
Abstract
Previous trials in Africa and Asia, including Bangladesh, showed that community health workers can effectively treat young infants (7–59 days) with fast breathing and children (2–59 months) with chest indrawing pneumonia at home with oral amoxicillin using enhanced integrated community case management (iCCM) protocols. However, the Enhanced Management of Pneumonia in Community (EMPIC), its pneumonia-specific component, has not yet been applied in routine government health systems. Here, we developed a protocol for a feasibility study on the integration of EMPIC into community clinics in Bangladesh through existing government health systems. This study will adopt an implementation research approach that integrates quantitative and qualitative methods. A delivery package will be co-developed with stakeholders to introduce enhanced pneumonia management through government systems in three…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPneumonia and Respiratory Infections · Global Maternal and Child Health · Child Nutrition and Water Access
