Abstract
Background
Sierra Leone has a very high maternal mortality rate, and this burden falls heavily on adolescents, a particularly vulnerable group; this is usually driven by poverty, lack of education and employment opportunities. In 2017, a local grassroots organisation, Lifeline Nehemiah Projects, developed a community-based mentoring intervention ‘2YoungLives’ (2YLs) for adolescent girls in Eastern Freetown. We aim to formally assess the feasibility and implementation of the 2YL mentorship scheme in new communities in Sierra Leone.
Methods
A hybrid type 2 pilot cluster randomised controlled trial of the 2YL mentoring scheme in urban and rural communities living around twelve peripheral health units (PHU) across five districts in Sierra Leone. Clusters will be matched into pairs and randomisation will be determined by computer-generated random numbers via a secure web-based system hosted by MedSciNet. All under-eighteen adolescents identified as pregnant in the community and/or the PHU are included. Feasibility (recruitment, retention, and attrition rates; data collection and completeness; sample calculation) and primary clinical outcome data (composite of maternal deaths, stillbirths, neonatal deaths) will be collected. A mixed-methods process evaluation will explore implementation outcomes, mechanisms of change, contextual factors, experiences of care, and health and wellbeing. A concurrent cost-consequence analysis will be undertaken. Main trial analysis will be pragmatic, by intention to treat, and a complementary per protocol analysis will also be included.
Discussion
Improving health and wellbeing for adolescent girls (including sexual and reproductive health) remains a top priority in Sierra Leone indicated by several government policies targeted to this group, in which maternal and infant mortality are still persistently high. Supporting these girls and facilitating their wellbeing is imperative, along with sensitisation of communities, strengthening of youth friendly services and collaboration with stakeholders at all levels (government, regional, community, family). We believe 2YL supports the global holistic agenda to integrate and implement interventions across health, education, and social systems in order to protect, nurture, and support the health and development potential of every adolescent girl, and thus become a model of good practice for adolescent pregnancy, to be adopted more widely in Sierra Leone and elsewhere.
Trial registration
ISRCTN registry ISRCTN32414369. Prospectively registered on 14/03/2022.
Funder
National Institute for Health and Care Research
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) South London
NIHR
NIHR Development and Skills Award
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference45 articles.
1. WHO, UNICEF, UN Population Fund, World Bank Group and the United Nations Population Division. Maternal mortality: levels and trends 2000 to 2017. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2019.
2. Maternal death surveillance and response Annual Report. A call for action, time to respond. Ministry of Health & Sanitation, Directorate of Reproductive and Child Health, Sierra Leone. 2019.
3. UNFPA, National strategy for the reduction of adolescent pregnancy and child marriage, 2018–2022. https://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/SLE_country%20profile.pdf (accessed Feb 22, 2022).
4. ‘Just because she’s young, it doesn’t mean she has to die’: exploring the contributing factors to high maternal mortality in adolescents in Eastern Freetown; a qualitative study;L November;Reprod Health,2018
5. Millennium development goal 5 and adolescents: looking back, moving forward;JP Vogel;Arch Dis Child,2015