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cKMC

This trial randomized 8 402 low birth weight babies in India to evaluate the impact of community-initiated Kangaroo Mother Care on survival.

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Impact of promoting Community initiated Kangaroo Mother Care听with support for low birth weight infants in India

Babies that are born small (also called low birth weight babies) make up nearly 80% of infant deaths, many of whom are born too early. More than 75% of these deaths could be prevented even without access to intensive care. Providing low birth weight babies the necessary care in the community could substantially听enhance neonatal and early infant survival. This is particularly salient in India, where over one quarter of infants are born with low birth weight.

Most interventions to promote Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) have been carried out in health facilities. This study, developed in collaboration with the WHO, aims to evaluate an intervention package based on the promotion of community initiated KMC (cKMC). The first completed stage designed and developed the intervention package and pilot tested it for feasibility and acceptability among mothers of low birth weight babies. It was finished in the summer of 2015.

The second stage was a randomized controlled trial of up to 10 000 low birth weight babies in Haryana, India.听The state government of Haryana, India, has been a partner in the study. It aimed to ascertain听the impact of community initiated KMC on survival of low birth weight infants during the neonatal period and in the first 6 month of life. A sub study among the first 550 children听assessed听their听psycho-motor development. Furthermore, the bond between mother and baby was evaluated, as well as the occurrence听of maternal depression. The analysis of the data from this study was completed in the spring of 2019. The about this work was published in The Lancet in October 2019.

Principal Investigators:
Sarmila Mazumder, Society for Applied 大象传媒,听India
Sunita Taneja, Society for Applied 大象传媒, India

Co-Principal Investigator:听
Halvor Sommerfelt,听University of Bergen, and Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Norway