The Tools for Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (TIMCI) study protocol: a multi-country mixed-method evaluation of pulse oximetry and clinical decision support algorithms.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_73FE9600E0EC
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The Tools for Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (TIMCI) study protocol: a multi-country mixed-method evaluation of pulse oximetry and clinical decision support algorithms.
Journal
Global health action
Author(s)
Beynon F., Langet H., Bohle L.F., Awasthi S., Ndiaye O., Machoki M'Imunya J., Masanja H., Horton S., Ba M., Cicconi S., Emmanuel-Fabula M., Faye P.M., Glass T.R., Keitel K., Kumar D., Kumar G., Levine G.A., Matata L., Mhalu G., Miheso A., Mjungu D., Njiri F., Reus E., Ruffo M., Schär F., Sharma K., Storey H.L., Masanja I., Wyss K., D'Acremont V.
Working group(s)
TIMCI Collaborator Group
ISSN
1654-9880 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1654-9880
Publication state
Published
Issued date
29/04/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
17
Number
1
Pages
2326253
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Randomized Controlled Trial
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Effective and sustainable strategies are needed to address the burden of preventable deaths among children under-five in resource-constrained settings. The Tools for Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (TIMCI) project aims to support healthcare providers to identify and manage severe illness, whilst promoting resource stewardship, by introducing pulse oximetry and clinical decision support algorithms (CDSAs) to primary care facilities in India, Kenya, Senegal and Tanzania. Health impact is assessed through: a pragmatic parallel group, superiority cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT), with primary care facilities randomly allocated (1:1) in India to pulse oximetry or control, and (1:1:1) in Tanzania to pulse oximetry plus CDSA, pulse oximetry, or control; and through a quasi-experimental pre-post study in Kenya and Senegal. Devices are implemented with guidance and training, mentorship, and community engagement. Sociodemographic and clinical data are collected from caregivers and records of enrolled sick children aged 0-59 months at study facilities, with phone follow-up on Day 7 (and Day 28 in the RCT). The primary outcomes assessed for the RCT are severe complications (mortality and secondary hospitalisations) by Day 7 and primary hospitalisations (within 24 hours and with referral); and, for the pre-post study, referrals and antibiotic. Secondary outcomes on other aspects of health status, hypoxaemia, referral, follow-up and antimicrobial prescription are also evaluated. In all countries, embedded mixed-method studies further evaluate the effects of the intervention on care and care processes, implementation, cost and cost-effectiveness. Pilot and baseline studies started mid-2021, RCT and post-intervention mid-2022, with anticipated completion mid-2023 and first results late-2023. Study approval has been granted by all relevant institutional review boards, national and WHO ethical review committees. Findings will be shared with communities, healthcare providers, Ministries of Health and other local, national and international stakeholders to facilitate evidence-based decision-making on scale-up.Study registration: NCT04910750 and NCT05065320.
Keywords
Humans, Infant, Oximetry, Child, Preschool, Decision Support Systems, Clinical, Infant, Newborn, Algorithms, Kenya, Primary Health Care/organization & administration, Senegal, India, Tanzania, Hypoxaemia, IMCI, cluster randomized controlled trial, primary care, quality of care
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
03/05/2024 16:27
Last modification date
15/05/2024 6:59
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