World Health Organization site
Skip Navigation Links

Main
Note: This record shows only 22 elements of the WHO Trial Registration Data Set. To view changes that have been made to the source record, or for additional information about this trial, click on the URL below to go to the source record in the primary register.
Register: ANZCTR
Last refreshed on: 3 April 2017
Main ID:  ACTRN12617000443392
Date of registration: 27/03/2017
Prospective Registration: No
Primary sponsor: The University of Newcastle, Australia
Public title: Communities Singing about Health Messages for a Healthy Pregnancy Creates Awareness of Pathways to Safer Pregnancy and Childbirth in Households in Rural Nepal
Scientific title: Effectiveness of Communities Singing Health Messages to Create Awareness of pathways to Safer Pregnancy and Childbirth in Rural Nepal: randomised cluster design study
Date of first enrolment: 1/05/2016
Target sample size: 1547
Recruitment status: Completed
URL:  http://www.anzctr.org.au/ACTRN12617000443392.aspx
Study type:  Interventional
Study design:  Randomised controlled trial  Parallel
Phase: 
Countries of recruitment
Contacts
Key inclusion & exclusion criteria
Health Condition(s) or Problem(s) studied
Maternal Health
Intervention(s)
In the Parbat district of Nepal, four rural Village Development Committees were randomly grouped (two each) into two clusters. A structured questionnaire was used to collect baseline and post-intervention data. An equal number of adult male and female heads of households were invited for the interview. Consents were sought from the respective Village Development Committees, schools and respondents involved.
In the intervention cluster, Community members were invited to write health song lyrics which were later presented in a song competition organised and judged by the community. To facilitate this process to happen, a total of 23 orientation sessions were organised for teachers, students, mothers group members and youths about the key health message area (below).
These orientation sessions were delivered by the research student (Binod B Sharma)who comes from Nepal and knows the local language and culture. These sessions were organised in the schools, villages, small townships of the village and in the working fields wherever people were available.
Sessions were organised in a group environment.
In addition to the information about the key message area for songwriting, he discussed the song competition program to be held in the community. Each orientation session took approximately 90 minutes to deliver and clarify the questions. The key message areas below were the subject of discussion during the orientation session. This was to orient them on the areas in which they will be writing song lines. In each 23 sessions, the uniform message about the key message areas and competition program were discussed.
There were 26 groups of people participated in the song competition. The most accailamed songs were taken to the intervention for house to house singing progression.
Given the overwhelming participation of the community and the culturally appropriate method of diffusion, teachers were enthusiastic to take on the role of disseminating the health messages in the community. The teachers, school management committees, village secretaries, and others decided the composition of the singing team. The training for both intervention teams was organised in Ramja Deurali. During training, there were sufficient rehearsals of the songs to ensure their smooth presentation in the field. During training, participants prepared a specific intervention plan for their area with the route of the intervention. Local teachers then led the awareness program, singing the health messages in a house to house community progression.
The singing sessions were continued from morning until evening while organising in the village to village environment. The singing session normally took around 75 minuses per session.
In the Chitre Village Development Committee, a group of six teachers were identified for the singing intervention. The Chitre intervention progression was completed in ten days, from 14th to 23rd July 2016.

In Ramja Deurali, one teacher was nominated to lead the team. Other members of the group included a traditional singer, adolescents, former students, and one local villager. The progression in Ramja Deurali took eight days, from 5th to 12th August 2016.

A total of 80 singing sessions were organised covering all the households in the intervention cluster. The sessions were essentially held wherever people were present; for example, they were held in individual houses, in the common area of the village, schools, on the roads, and even in the fields where a group of people were working. A total of 2,369 people attended and listened to the health messages. A town crier was mobilised to inform villagers of the program just before the singing commenced at each group of houses.

An information sheet of key message areas was distributed to respective group members.
Key message areas:
1. Antenatal examination
a. Minimum of four antenatal visits during pregnancy.
2. Food
a. Pregnant women should eat food in every four hours.
b. Pregnant woman should take a balance of four foods - rice, vegetables, meat and maize. The recommended Iron tablets should be taken with milk if necessary.
3. Rest
a. Eight hours (a pair of four hours) of unbroken sleep is essential for the pregnant woman.
b. To ensure a healthy baby, the pregnant woman should not be engaged in heavy work and long hours of work after four months of pregnancy. They should make sure to rest with the weight off their feet every four hours.
4. Preparation for childbirth
a. Four key people (father-in-law, mother-in-law, husband and female community health volunteer) should engage in planning for childbirth.
b. They should inform health facility or skilled health worker before four weeks of the expected date of delivery.
c. The plan of transportation should be finalised four days before the expected date of delivery.
The winning songs were taught to local teachers, traditional singers and students who sang the songs in the villages. Songs were s
Primary Outcome(s)
Secondary Outcome(s)
Secondary ID(s)
Source(s) of Monetary Support
Secondary Sponsor(s)
Ethics review
Results
Results available:
Date Posted:
Date Completed:
URL:
Disclaimer: Trials posted on this search portal are not endorsed by WHO, but are provided as a service to our users. In no event shall the World Health Organization be liable for any damages arising from the use of the information linked to in this section. None of the information obtained through use of the search portal should in any way be used in clinical care without consulting a physician or licensed health professional. WHO is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness and/or use made of the content displayed for any trial record.
Copyright - World Health Organization - Version 3.6 - Version history