Can Midlevel Health-Care Providers Administer Early Medical Abortion as Safely and Effectively as Doctors? A Randomised Controlled Equivalence Trial in Nepal

BACKGROUND: Medical abortion is under-used in developing countries. We assessed whether early fi rst-trimester medical abortion provided by midlevel providers (government-trained, certified nurses and auxiliary nurse midwives) was as safe and effective as that provided by doctors in Nepal. METHODS: This multicentre randomised controlled equivalence trial was done in fi ve rural district hospitals in Nepal. Women were eligible for medical abortion if their pregnancy was of less than 9 weeks (63 days) and if they resided less than 90 min journey away from the study clinic. Women were ineligible if they had any contraindication to medical abortion. We used a computer-generated randomisation scheme stratified by study centre with a block size of six. Women were randomly assigned to a doctor or a midlevel provider for oral administration of 200 mg mifepristone followed by 800 mug misoprostol vaginally 2 days later, and followed up 10-4 days later. The primary endpoint was complete abortion without manual vacuum aspiration within 30 days of treatment. The study was not masked. Abortions were recorded as complete, incomplete, or failed (continuing pregnancy). Analyses for primary and secondary endpoints were by intention to treat, supplemented by per-protocol analysis of the primary endpoint. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01186302. FINDINGS: Of 1295 women screened, 535 were randomly assigned to a doctor and 542 to a midlevel provider. 514 and 518, respectively, were included in the analyses of the primary endpoint. Abortions were judged complete in 504 (97.3%) women assigned to midlevel providers and in 494 (96.1%) assigned to physicians. The risk difference for complete abortion was 1.24% (95% CI -0.53 to 3.02), which falls within the predefined equivalence range (-5% to 5%). Five cases (1%) were recorded as failed abortion in the doctor cohort and none in the midlevel provider cohort; the remaining cases were recorded as incomplete abortions. No serious complications were noted. INTERPRETATION: The provision of medical abortion up to 9 weeks' gestation by midlevel providers and doctors was similar in safety and effectiveness. Where permitted by law, appropriately trained midlevel health-care providers can provide safe, low-technology medical abortion services for women independently from doctors. FUNDING: UNDP/UNFPA/WHO/World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP), Department of Reproductive Health and Research (RHR), World Health Organization.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Warriner, I. K., Wang, D., Huong, N. T., Thapa, K., Tamang, A., Shah, I., Baird, D. T., Meirik, O.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:EN
Published: 2011
Subjects:Abortifacient Agents, Nonsteroidal Abortifacient Agents, Steroidal Abortifacient Agents, Induced Abortion, Adult, Female, District Hospitals, Rural Hospitals, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mifepristone, Misoprostol, Nepal, Nurse Midwives, Nurse Practitioners, Nurses, Physician Assistants, Physicians, Pregnancy, First Pregnancy Trimester, Risk Assessment, Therapeutic Equivalency,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5151
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spelling dig-okr-1098651512021-04-23T14:02:21Z Can Midlevel Health-Care Providers Administer Early Medical Abortion as Safely and Effectively as Doctors? A Randomised Controlled Equivalence Trial in Nepal Warriner, I. K. Wang, D. Huong, N. T. Thapa, K. Tamang, A. Shah, I. Baird, D. T. Meirik, O. Abortifacient Agents Nonsteroidal Abortifacient Agents Steroidal Abortifacient Agents Induced Abortion Adult Female District Hospitals Rural Hospitals Humans Male Middle Aged Mifepristone Misoprostol Nepal Nurse Midwives Nurse Practitioners Nurses Physician Assistants Physicians Pregnancy First Pregnancy Trimester Risk Assessment Therapeutic Equivalency BACKGROUND: Medical abortion is under-used in developing countries. We assessed whether early fi rst-trimester medical abortion provided by midlevel providers (government-trained, certified nurses and auxiliary nurse midwives) was as safe and effective as that provided by doctors in Nepal. METHODS: This multicentre randomised controlled equivalence trial was done in fi ve rural district hospitals in Nepal. Women were eligible for medical abortion if their pregnancy was of less than 9 weeks (63 days) and if they resided less than 90 min journey away from the study clinic. Women were ineligible if they had any contraindication to medical abortion. We used a computer-generated randomisation scheme stratified by study centre with a block size of six. Women were randomly assigned to a doctor or a midlevel provider for oral administration of 200 mg mifepristone followed by 800 mug misoprostol vaginally 2 days later, and followed up 10-4 days later. The primary endpoint was complete abortion without manual vacuum aspiration within 30 days of treatment. The study was not masked. Abortions were recorded as complete, incomplete, or failed (continuing pregnancy). Analyses for primary and secondary endpoints were by intention to treat, supplemented by per-protocol analysis of the primary endpoint. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01186302. FINDINGS: Of 1295 women screened, 535 were randomly assigned to a doctor and 542 to a midlevel provider. 514 and 518, respectively, were included in the analyses of the primary endpoint. Abortions were judged complete in 504 (97.3%) women assigned to midlevel providers and in 494 (96.1%) assigned to physicians. The risk difference for complete abortion was 1.24% (95% CI -0.53 to 3.02), which falls within the predefined equivalence range (-5% to 5%). Five cases (1%) were recorded as failed abortion in the doctor cohort and none in the midlevel provider cohort; the remaining cases were recorded as incomplete abortions. No serious complications were noted. INTERPRETATION: The provision of medical abortion up to 9 weeks' gestation by midlevel providers and doctors was similar in safety and effectiveness. Where permitted by law, appropriately trained midlevel health-care providers can provide safe, low-technology medical abortion services for women independently from doctors. FUNDING: UNDP/UNFPA/WHO/World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP), Department of Reproductive Health and Research (RHR), World Health Organization. 2012-03-30T07:31:33Z 2012-03-30T07:31:33Z 2011 Journal Article Lancet 1474-547X (Electronic) 0140-6736 (Linking) http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5151 EN http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Journal Article Nepal
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language EN
topic Abortifacient Agents
Nonsteroidal Abortifacient Agents
Steroidal Abortifacient Agents
Induced Abortion
Adult
Female
District Hospitals
Rural Hospitals
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Mifepristone
Misoprostol
Nepal
Nurse Midwives
Nurse Practitioners
Nurses
Physician Assistants
Physicians
Pregnancy
First Pregnancy Trimester
Risk Assessment
Therapeutic Equivalency
Abortifacient Agents
Nonsteroidal Abortifacient Agents
Steroidal Abortifacient Agents
Induced Abortion
Adult
Female
District Hospitals
Rural Hospitals
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Mifepristone
Misoprostol
Nepal
Nurse Midwives
Nurse Practitioners
Nurses
Physician Assistants
Physicians
Pregnancy
First Pregnancy Trimester
Risk Assessment
Therapeutic Equivalency
spellingShingle Abortifacient Agents
Nonsteroidal Abortifacient Agents
Steroidal Abortifacient Agents
Induced Abortion
Adult
Female
District Hospitals
Rural Hospitals
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Mifepristone
Misoprostol
Nepal
Nurse Midwives
Nurse Practitioners
Nurses
Physician Assistants
Physicians
Pregnancy
First Pregnancy Trimester
Risk Assessment
Therapeutic Equivalency
Abortifacient Agents
Nonsteroidal Abortifacient Agents
Steroidal Abortifacient Agents
Induced Abortion
Adult
Female
District Hospitals
Rural Hospitals
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Mifepristone
Misoprostol
Nepal
Nurse Midwives
Nurse Practitioners
Nurses
Physician Assistants
Physicians
Pregnancy
First Pregnancy Trimester
Risk Assessment
Therapeutic Equivalency
Warriner, I. K.
Wang, D.
Huong, N. T.
Thapa, K.
Tamang, A.
Shah, I.
Baird, D. T.
Meirik, O.
Can Midlevel Health-Care Providers Administer Early Medical Abortion as Safely and Effectively as Doctors? A Randomised Controlled Equivalence Trial in Nepal
description BACKGROUND: Medical abortion is under-used in developing countries. We assessed whether early fi rst-trimester medical abortion provided by midlevel providers (government-trained, certified nurses and auxiliary nurse midwives) was as safe and effective as that provided by doctors in Nepal. METHODS: This multicentre randomised controlled equivalence trial was done in fi ve rural district hospitals in Nepal. Women were eligible for medical abortion if their pregnancy was of less than 9 weeks (63 days) and if they resided less than 90 min journey away from the study clinic. Women were ineligible if they had any contraindication to medical abortion. We used a computer-generated randomisation scheme stratified by study centre with a block size of six. Women were randomly assigned to a doctor or a midlevel provider for oral administration of 200 mg mifepristone followed by 800 mug misoprostol vaginally 2 days later, and followed up 10-4 days later. The primary endpoint was complete abortion without manual vacuum aspiration within 30 days of treatment. The study was not masked. Abortions were recorded as complete, incomplete, or failed (continuing pregnancy). Analyses for primary and secondary endpoints were by intention to treat, supplemented by per-protocol analysis of the primary endpoint. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01186302. FINDINGS: Of 1295 women screened, 535 were randomly assigned to a doctor and 542 to a midlevel provider. 514 and 518, respectively, were included in the analyses of the primary endpoint. Abortions were judged complete in 504 (97.3%) women assigned to midlevel providers and in 494 (96.1%) assigned to physicians. The risk difference for complete abortion was 1.24% (95% CI -0.53 to 3.02), which falls within the predefined equivalence range (-5% to 5%). Five cases (1%) were recorded as failed abortion in the doctor cohort and none in the midlevel provider cohort; the remaining cases were recorded as incomplete abortions. No serious complications were noted. INTERPRETATION: The provision of medical abortion up to 9 weeks' gestation by midlevel providers and doctors was similar in safety and effectiveness. Where permitted by law, appropriately trained midlevel health-care providers can provide safe, low-technology medical abortion services for women independently from doctors. FUNDING: UNDP/UNFPA/WHO/World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP), Department of Reproductive Health and Research (RHR), World Health Organization.
format Journal Article
topic_facet Abortifacient Agents
Nonsteroidal Abortifacient Agents
Steroidal Abortifacient Agents
Induced Abortion
Adult
Female
District Hospitals
Rural Hospitals
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Mifepristone
Misoprostol
Nepal
Nurse Midwives
Nurse Practitioners
Nurses
Physician Assistants
Physicians
Pregnancy
First Pregnancy Trimester
Risk Assessment
Therapeutic Equivalency
author Warriner, I. K.
Wang, D.
Huong, N. T.
Thapa, K.
Tamang, A.
Shah, I.
Baird, D. T.
Meirik, O.
author_facet Warriner, I. K.
Wang, D.
Huong, N. T.
Thapa, K.
Tamang, A.
Shah, I.
Baird, D. T.
Meirik, O.
author_sort Warriner, I. K.
title Can Midlevel Health-Care Providers Administer Early Medical Abortion as Safely and Effectively as Doctors? A Randomised Controlled Equivalence Trial in Nepal
title_short Can Midlevel Health-Care Providers Administer Early Medical Abortion as Safely and Effectively as Doctors? A Randomised Controlled Equivalence Trial in Nepal
title_full Can Midlevel Health-Care Providers Administer Early Medical Abortion as Safely and Effectively as Doctors? A Randomised Controlled Equivalence Trial in Nepal
title_fullStr Can Midlevel Health-Care Providers Administer Early Medical Abortion as Safely and Effectively as Doctors? A Randomised Controlled Equivalence Trial in Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Can Midlevel Health-Care Providers Administer Early Medical Abortion as Safely and Effectively as Doctors? A Randomised Controlled Equivalence Trial in Nepal
title_sort can midlevel health-care providers administer early medical abortion as safely and effectively as doctors? a randomised controlled equivalence trial in nepal
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5151
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