Title: COMMUNITY%20INTERVENTION%20TRIALS
1COMMUNITY INTERVENTION TRIALS
AUTHOR Dr. A. K. AVASARALA
MBBS, M.D. PROFESSOR HEAD DEPT OF COMMUNITY
MEDICINE EPIDEMIOLOGY PRATHIMA INSTITUTE OF
MEDICAL SCIENCES, KARIMNAGAR, A.P.. INDIA
91505417 avasarala_at_yahoo.com
2PROMPT
- I WISH TO DEVELOP AN EPIDEMIOLOGY COURSE FOR
TEACHING, AS THERE IS GOOD RESPONSE, NATIONALLY
AND INTERNATIONALLY FROM THE FACULTY TEACHING
EPIDEMIOLOGY, FOR MY PREVIOUS THIRTEEN
EPIDEMIOLOGY LECTURES
3LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- READER IS EXPECTED TO LEARN THE NATURE SCOPE OF
COMMUNITY INTERVENTIONS - THE PRECAUTIONS AND STEPS IN CONDUCTING
COMMUNITY TRIALS - ABLE TO ANALYSE AND INTERPRET THE RESULTS
4PERFORMANCE OBJECTIVES
- READER CAN DESIGN AND PERFORM COMMUNITY
INTERVENTION TRIALS - HE CAN PROMOTE THE HEALTH OF THE COMMUNITY AS A
WHOLE BY RISK FACTOR REDUCTION TRIALS
5TYPES
- PRIMARY PREVENTIVE TYPE (COMMUNITY INTERVENTION
TRIALS (CIT)
6NATURE OF STUDIES
- INTERVENTION STUDIES
- NOT JUST OBSERVATIONS
-
- EXPERIMENTATIONS
7COMMUNITY INTERVENTION TRIALS (CIT )
- THE MAIN PURPOSE IS TO REDUCE THE OCCURRENCE OF
DISEASES AND DEATHS EARLY IN LIFE IN THE WHOLE
COMMUNITY, HENCE THE NAME.
8WHY CIT ?
THE HEALTH STATUS OF A COMMUNITY.
IMPACT ON
REDUCTION IN RISK FACTORS
CHANGE TO HEALTHIER LIFESTYLE BY HIGH-RISK
GROUPS
CHANGE THE BEHAVIOR OF OTHER MEMBERS OF THE
SOCIETY
LEADS TO
INTERVENTIONS AIMED AND FOCUSED AT SPECIFIC
DISEASES
THE INCIDENCE OR COURSE OF OTHER DISEASES.
AFFECT
HEALTH ACTIVITIES IN COMMUNITIES
THE CONFIDENCE IN THE PEOPLE AND THEREBY THEIR
INVOLVEMENT AND ACCEPTANCE
ENHANCE
9GENERAL OBJECTIVES
- TO INCREASE HEALTH KNOWLEDGE
- OF THE WHOLE COMMUNITY ,
H E A L T H E D U C A T I O N
- TO DEVELOP POSITIVE AND RIGHT ATTITUDE
- IN THE COMMUNITY
- TO INCREASE THE PRACTICE OF POSITIVE
- HEALTH BEHAVIOR OF THE WHOLE COMMUNITY
- THEREBY PREVENTING EARLY DISEASES
- AND DEATHS IN THE COMMUNITY
10SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES
- TO MEASURE VERIFIABLE CHANGES IN
- HEALTH KNOWLEDGE IMPROVEMENT
- ATTITUDE
- BEHAVIOR
11STEPS OF CONDUCTING CIT
- SETTING
- STUDY DESIGN
- INTERVENTION METHODS
- EVALUATION OF INTERVENTION
- LIMITATIONS OF STUDY
12IDEAL SETTING
- COMMUNITY IS THE IDEAL SETTING
13STUDY DESIGN
- QUASI - EXPERIMENTAL TYPE
THE INVESTIGATOR WILL NOT BE HAVING AS MUCH OF A
CHANCE OF RANDOM ALLOCATION OF THE INDIVIDUALS
TO THE TWO GROUPS AS IN CLINICAL TRIALS.
14SELECTION OF REFERENCE AND INTERVENTION
POPULATIONS
- DESIRABLE TO HAVE ALMOST IDENTICAL REFERENCE AND
INTERVENTION POPULATIONS TO GET THE VALID RESULTS
OUT OF COMMUNITY TRIALS.
15NESTED OR EMBEDDED DESIGN
REFERENCE POPULATION
Pooled intervention
16EMBEDDED DESIGN
- EMBEDDED TYPE WILL HELP
- IN REDUCING SECULAR DIFFERENCES
- IN REDUCING CONFOUNDING BIAS AS THE BOTH KNOWN
AND UNKNOWN VARIABLE FACTORS WILL BE EQUALLY
DISTRIBUTED IN BOTH THE POPULATIONS. -
17REFERENCE POPULATION
- THE ONE WITH WHICH THE RESULTS OBTAINED FROM
THE TRIAL ON THE INTERVENTION POPULATION ARE
COMPARED, ANALYZED, INTERPRETED AND UTILIZED
FOR PREPARING PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY.
18INTERVENTION POPULATION
- THE EXPERIMENTAL POPULATION RANDOMLY SELECTED
FROM A COUNTRY OR REGION AND ALMOST IDENTICAL AND
COMPARABLE WITH THE REFERENCE (CONTROL)
POPULATION IN POSSESSING ALL ITS CHARACTERISTICS.
19UNDERSTANDING SOCIETAL CONDITIONS
- COMMONNESS OF TERRITORY,
- MORTALITY PATTERN,
- MORBIDITY PATTERN,
- FERTILITY PATTERN,
- CUSTOMS ,
- SECULAR TRENDS
-
20COLLECTING BASE LINE INFORMATION
- PREPARING THE BASE LINE LEVELS OF RISK FACTORS,
MORTALITY RATES
21INTERVENTION CONCEPT
- IDEA IS TO BRING ABOUT THE ATTITUDINAL CHANGE IN
THE PEOPLE TO ALTER THEIR NEGATIVE LIFE STYLES
AND TO SUSTAIN. - THIS CAN BE ACHIEVED BY MEANS OF THE FOLLOWING
SOCIAL SKILL LEARNING TECHNIQUES.
22INTERVENTION BY SOCIAL COGNITION/LEARNING
- SOCIAL COGNITION/LEARNING WHEREIN THE CHANGE
OF BEHAVIOR CAN BE ACHIEVED THROUGH INTENSIVE
EXPOSURE TO IMPORTANT MODELS LIKE POP STARS,
PLAYERS.
23INTERVENTION BY REASONED ACTION AND PLANNED
BEHAVIOR
- WHERE THE CHANGE CAN BE BROUGHT ABOUT BY
ADAPTING THE INFORMATION GIVEN BY CREDITABLE
PERSON FIRST AND SUSTAINING IT BY SELF MANAGEMENT
LATER I.E. BY LEARNING THE NECESSARY SKILLS.
24INTERVENTION BY PERSUASIVE COMMUNICATION
- CONTINUOUS PERSUASIVE COMMUNICATION TO THE PEOPLE
THROUGH MASS MEDIA LIKE MOVIES, TELEVISION ETC TO
CONVINCE THEM TO ADOPT POSITIVE LIFE STYLES CAN
ALSO BRING ABOUT A CHANGE IN LIFE STYLE.
25PRECEDE-PROCEED MODEL INTERVENTION
- The PRECEDE process
- Predisposing,
- Reinforcing, and
- Enabling
- Constructs in
- Educational-environmental
- Diagnosis and
- Evaluation)
- PROCEED process follows with implementation,
process, and impact and outcome evaluation.
26SOCIAL MARKETING INTERVENTION
- PREVENTIVE HEALTH SERVICES ARE THE PRODUCTS TO BE
MARKETED AND THE TARGET AUDIENCE, COSTS AND
BENEFITS HAVE TO BE DEFINED. - PROPER MESSAGES HAVE TO BE DEVELOPED AND
EFFECTIVE CHANNELS FOR ACCEPTANCE HAVE TO BE
SELECTED.
27EVALUATION OF INTERVENTION
- ENDPOINTS TO BE MEASURED
- CHANGES IN KNOWLEDGE, ATTITUDE AND PRACTICE
- MEANS AND PREVALENCES OF RISK FACTORS
- SYMPTOMS/SIGNS/PAIN REDUCTION
- SPECIFIC MORBIDITY (OBTAINED FROM PRACTITIONERS,
HOSPITALS, AVAILABILITY OF MEDICAL SERVICES AND
TREATMENT) - SPECIFIC MORTALITY RATES OF THE MOST COMMON
DISEASES - TOTAL MORTALITY IN THE BOTH COMMUNITIES
28EVALUATION METHODS
- POPULATION SURVEYS ARE CARRIED OUT BOTH IN THE
REFERENCE AND INTERVENTION POPULATIONS
SIMULTANEOUSLY THRICE I.E. BEFORE, DURING AND
AFTER THE INTERVENTION.
29TECHNIQUES OF MEASUREMENT
- QUESTIONNAIRES ORAL WRITTEN, OR COMPUTERIZED
ONES ARE USED DURING THE SURVEYS - ANALYTICAL METHODS LABORATORY TESTS FOR
PHYSICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL PARAMETERS BY TRAINED
PERSONNEL DONE BEFORE AFTER CIT TO AVOID OBSERVER
VARIATION -
30ROSENTHAL EFFECT
- THE INDIVIDUALS NATURE OR PREFERENCE TO ENHANCE
OR REDUCE THE VALUE OF THE ENDPOINT WHILE TESTING
OR READING THE LABORATORY FINDINGS BECAUSE OF HIS
PERSONALITY INFLUENCE HAS ALSO TO BE TAKEN
CARE OFF.
31CEILING EFFECT
- CEILING EFFECT IS SAID TO BE
PRESENT IN THE COMMUNITY WHEN A
PART OR WHOLE OF THE COMMUNITY POSSESSES PERSONS
AT HIGH RISK. -
32PRECAUTIONS
- NET CHANGES ARE MEASURED UNIFORMLY IN A
STANDARDIZED AND SIMILAR MANNER IN BOTH THE
REFERENCE (CONTROL) AND INTERVENTION POPULATIONS - INITIAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE TWO POPULATIONS
HAVE TO BE GIVEN DUE CONSIDERATION. THESE MAY BE
DUE TO CHANCE OR REGRESSION TO THE MEAN. -
33INTENTION TO TREAT PRINCIPLE
- THE INTENTION TO TREAT PRINCIPLE, THAT IS, ONCE
RANDOMIZED, ALWAYS ANALYZED IS TO BE STRICTLY
FOLLOWED
34NET CHANGE MEASUREMENT
I0
R1
RELATIVE CHANGE
RISK FACTOR LEVEL
I1
R0
FINAL SURVEY
BASE-LINE
35MULTIVARIATE REGRESSION MODEL
- FORMULA
- Y AGE TIME1 TIME2
- (COMMUNITY TIME1)
- (COMMUNITY TIME2)
36FACTORS AFFECTING THE EVALUATION
- DELAY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE RISK FACTORS
HINDERS THE EVALUATION - INTENSITY AND DENSITY OF INTERVENTION DETERMINES
THE EVALUATION STRATEGY - STATISTICAL POWER OF THE SAMPLES DETERMINES
EVALUATION
37THE SUCCESS OF CIT
- THE SOCIETAL CONDITIONS AND ENVIRONMENT
- AVAILABILITY OF THE OTHER HELPING SOCIAL HEALTH
STRUCTURES - POSITIVE PREVENTIVE CLIMATE
- THE NEED FOR THE TRIAL MUST BE FELT BY THE
COMMUNITY AS A DIRE NECESSITY - PRACTICAL FEASIBILITY, FINANCIAL AND TIME
CONSTRAINTS
38LIMITATIONS-1
- THE RANDOMIZATION CAN NOT BE ACHIEVED STRICTLY
- The sampling method may be having inherent
error or the sampled communities may be having
inherent differences which can, of course, be
minimized with difficulty.
39LIMITATIONS-2
- CHANGES IN MORTALITY AND MORBIDITY TAKE SEVERAL
YEARS TO OCCUR - Though it is true to larger extent
particularly with the non-infectious diseases,
biochemical/ risk factors changes may be seen
comparatively earlier in the intervention
community.
40EFFECT OF IMMIGRATION INTO AND EMIGRATION
- IMMIGRATION INTO AND EMIGRATION FROM ANY OF THE
TWO COMMUNITIES UNDER TRIAL WILL AFFECT THE
EVALUATION AND TRIAL OBJECTIVES. - ONLY THE LIVING PART OF THE COMMUNITY CAN SERVE
AS THE USEFUL DENOMINATOR FOR CORRECT ASSESSMENT.
HENCE MIGRATION FACTOR HAS TO BE GIVEN DUE
CONSIDERATION.
41PERSONAL EXPERIENCECOMMUNITY FLUORIDATIONFOR
DENTAL CARIES 1990
- START / DURATION 1992,
- 5 YEARS
- POPULATION 8000, SHIELANAGAR, VISAKHAPATNAM,
- INTERVENTION FLOURIDATION OF MUNICIPAL WATER
SUPPLIES.
42NORTH KARELIA PROJECT
- START / DURATION 1972
- 10YEARS INTERVENTION.
- POPULATION 180000
- INHABITANTS, AGES 2559 YEARS.
- INTERVENTION COMPREHENSIVE
- COMMUNITY INTERVENTION, REDUCTION OF
ARDIOVASCULAR RISK FACTORS.
43CORONARY RISK FACTOR STUDY (CORIS)
- START / DURATION 1979 4 YEARS
- OF INTERENTION.
- POPULATION 11700 WHITE
- PERSONS, AGES 15 64 YEARS.
- INTERVENTION COMPREHENSIVE
- COMMUNITY INTERVENTION, SMALL MASS MEDIA AND
INTERPERSONAL (HIGH INTENSE) INTERVENTION REDUCE
CHOLESTOAL BP, SMOKING STRESS, INCREASE PHYSICAL
ACTIVITY.
44STANFORD FIVE CITY PROJECT
- START / DURATION 1980
- 5 YEARS INTERENTION.
- POPULATION 122800, AGES
- 12 74 YEARS.
- INTERVENTION COMPREHENSIVE
- COMMUNITY INTERVENTION, REDUCE CHOLESTEROL,
BP, SMOKING, WEIGHT, INCREASE PHYSICAL ACTIVITY.
45MINNESOTA HEART HEALTH PROGRAM
- START / DURATION 1980 5 6 YEARS OF
INTERVENTION. - POPULATION 231000 ADULTS.
- INTERVENTION IMPROVE HEALTH BEHAVIOUR, REDUCE
CHOLESTROL, 7 MG/DL, BP 2MMHG, SMOKING 3,
INCRESE PHYSICAL ACTIVITY 50KCAL /DAY, REDUCE
CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE MOBIDITY AND MORTALITY
15.
46PAWTUCKET HEART HEALTH STUDY
- START / DURATION 1981,
- 7 YEARS INTERVENTION.
- POPULATION 72000 WORKING CLASS PEOPLE.
- INTERVENTION COMMUNITY ACTIVATION
47CONCLUSIONS
- DUE TO OUR INTERVENTIONS, REDUCTION IN HARMFUL
LIFESTYLES/RISK FACTORS WILL OCCUR THEREBY
LEADING TO THE REDUCTION IN MORBIDITY, MORTALITY
OR DISABILITY RATES.
48REFERENCES
- Brian Mac Mahan - Epidemiology principles
methods - Roger Detels, James Mc Even-Oxford Text Book of
Public Health - Maxcy-Rosenau-Last, Public Health Preventive
medicine - Brett Cassens- Public Health Medicine,National
Student Series.