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HEALTH

Project

Smart Containment with Active Learning (SCALE) Project

Smart Containment with Active Learning (SCALE) Project

SCALE is a consortium of international and Pakistani experts in epidemiology, public health, public policy, economics, data analytics, and technology. CERP leads the SCALE Covid-19 Response in Pakistan.

Project

Growth Monitoring Project

Growth Monitoring Project

This project focuses on addressing child stunting in Pakistan through a behavioural intervention.

Project

Microbe Literacy Intervention

Microbe Literacy Intervention

This project aims to improve health and hygiene practices among illiterate women in Pakistan.

Project

Lady Health Worker Project

Lady Health Worker Project

This study will take a closer look at the target population served by LHWs in Punjab and delve into the factors that determine their successful performance.

Project

Infant Feeding Project

Infant Feeding Project

To develop and user-test an innovative mobile health application to provide decision-making support and educational tools through training to Community Health Workers (CHW) serving in rural communities to adopt WHO-recommended breastfeeding practices and improve infant health.

Smart Containment with Active Learning (SCALE) Project

The Smart Containment with Active Learning (SCALE) Consortium was formed to assist policymakers in developing a multidisciplinary policy response to COVID-19 that draws on the expertise of researchers and practitioners in public health, infectious diseases, epidemiology, economics, policy, and public management, technology, and data science as well as business & non-profit leaders.

CERP collected and collated evidence from different sources to provide understanding of the evolution of COVID-19 pandemic in Pakistan. SCALE Consortium worked in close collaboration with Primary and Secondary Healthcare Department Punjab (P&SHD) on COVID-19 from November 2020 until June 2022. The project team attempted to understand the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 infection, variation in infectivity rates and finally rates of morbidity and mortality in the province of Punjab, Pakistan by using the administrative data. Random sample testing was conducted in the urban community in Lahore District to supplement the administrative data.

Furthermore, the project gathered primary survey data on citizens vaccination rates and views towards vaccination. The project also analysed the contact data using two different contact tracing algorithms, mortal bandits and simple pilot. In the process, individual heterogeneity in infectivity was also estimated. The results open an entirely new direction for contact tracing that may allow countries to reduce the contact tracing burden by 80% or more. This significantly reduces the fiscal and human resources required to interrupt outbreaks of the epidemic.

Date:

2020 – 2022

Funding Partners:

Foreign and Commonwealth Development Office

Implementing Partner:

Primary & Secondary Healthcare Department Punjab (P&SHD)

Tags

COVID-19, Public Policy, Emergency Response, Epidemiology

Growth Monitoring Project

Stunting is an anthropometric indicator of chronic undernutrition identifying low height for age and capturing the cumulative effects of linear growth retardation. Stunting is responsible for 14.5% of deaths and 12.6% of the total disease burden among under-five children, most of which is concentrated in the low and middle-income countries in Africa and South-Central Asia. Through pathways such as reduced schooling ( 1.6 years on average), reduced height in adulthood ( 6 cm on average), and lower cognitive skills ( 0.6 standard deviations on a typical test), the impact of chronic nutritional deprivation during childhood on lifetime income can be very high. For South Asia and Africa, the income penalty of stunting has been estimated to be as large as 9-10% of GDP per capita. In Pakistan, 44% children under 5-years old are stunted, with marked socioeconomic inequality in its distribution.

We hypothesise that caregivers from disadvantaged communities in developing countries do not receive adequate, direct, and regular feedback on the growth-trajectory of children in their care. It also constrains them in developing a better understanding of the relationship between different childcare inputs – such as appropriate nutrition and safe drinking water – and healthy physical development. Consequently, despite having access to information on optimal parenting practices via traditional nutritional counseling, caregivers do not respond to signals on their child’s growth by adjusting their nutritional and child-care inputs, leading to stunting of their children.

As a prospective solution, we propose an easily implementable, flexible, and low-cost in-home growth monitoring tool called GroMoTo and intend to test its effectiveness with an open-label randomised controlled trial (RCT).
Findings
Findings revealed positive and significant improvement in children’s height-for-age z-score (HAZ) and reduction in severe stunting in treatment arms as compared to the matched control group one year after baseline.

Date:

2018-2020

Funding & Implementing Partners:

Strategic Impact Evaluation Fund (SIEF), Institute of Economic Research, Research Division of Comparative and World Economies (IER), Shahid Hussain Foundation (SHF), National Commission for Human Development (NCHD), Faculty Initiative Fund (FIF), Lahore University of Management Sciences, Sukoon Water Plant

Tags

Health, Child Stunting, Nutrition, Behavioural Intervention

Microbe Literacy Intervention

CERP in partnership with the National Commission for Human Development (NCHD), the University of Chicago and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) designed an intervention to improve health and hygiene practices among illiterate women in Pakistan. According to recent literature in public health, low-cost standard hygiene and sanitation messages that promote hand washing, safe food handling and safe water storage are not widely adopted. One reason people may not respond to (or have low “willingness to pay” for) hygiene promotion is that messages are not salient. Conventional recommendations encourage infection prevention by appealing to the germ theory of disease. This conception of illness does not resonate well with traditional “hot/cold” beliefs about the causes of illness that prevail in many traditional, culturally conservative communities. In Pakistan, 70 percent of the population practices some form of traditional medicine, which does not incorporate microscopic agents. Hygiene recommendations may not resonate for people who have never conceived of microscopic life, or who do not believe that microscopic pathogens cause illness.

Date:

2013 – 2015

Funding & Implementing Partners:

Lady Health Worker Project / Using Preference Parameter Estimates to Optimise Public Sector Wage Contracts: A Field Study in Pakistan

In Punjab, Lady Health Workers (LHWs) serve as frontline changemakers. Their duties are multifold, from implementing large health campaigns, spreading awareness about diseases to supporting the management of health crises. On average, each LHW is responsible for going door-to-door to 150 to 200 households and collects key data of community members within these households, such as number of fully immunised children, contraceptive prevalence and infant mortality rate.

A study conducted by Oxford Policy Management highlighted that the population served by LHWs has substantially better health indicators than those not covered by LHWs. Owing to the potential LHWs hold in bringing forth long-term change in the province’s healthcare sector, it is essential for the Government of Punjab to leverage this resource effectively.

Date:

Sep 2022-Apr 2023

Funding & Implementing Partners:

IGC, Primary and Secondary Healthcare Department Punjab

Tags

Healthcare systems

Infant Feeding Project

Breastfeeding is critical for infant health, particularly in poor settings, as it ensures infants receive key nutrients and protects infants from lethal water-borne infections such as diarrheal disease and pneumonia. Worldwide, adoption of WHO-recommended breastfeeding practices could avert over 820,000 infant deaths annually, which include: (1) early initiation (< 1 hour after birth), (2) exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months, and (3) continued breastfeeding with appropriate complementary foods for > 2 years.
CERP’s Infant Feeding Project will design and evaluate a mobile health app to support the promotion of WHO-recommended breastfeeding practices by Lady Health Workers (LHWs) in rural Pakistan, where extremely poor breastfeeding indicators along with poor water quality likely contribute to Pakistan’s high neonatal mortality rate of 42 per 1,000 live births – one of the highest in the world (DHS, 2018). The project aims to conduct a Randomised Controlled Trial to evaluate an intervention involving a mHealth tool and associated training to increase WHO-recommended breastfeeding practices in rural Pakistan. The mHealth app will aim to enhance and complement the knowledge base of LHWs through educational tools on breastfeeding during their routine home visits with mothers and other influential family decision-makers.

Date:

2021 – ongoing

Funding Partners:

USAID, University of Chicago, Fund for Innovation in Development

Implementing Partner:

Duke University, Aga Khan University, IRMNCH -Govt of Punjab, CERP Labs, UNICEF

Tags

Health, Child Health, Nutrition