Building knowledge, optimising physical and mental health and setting up healthier life trajectories in South African women (Bukhali): a preconception randomised control trial part of the Healthy Life Trajectories Initiative (HeLTI)

Author:

Norris Shane AORCID,Draper Catherine E,Prioreschi Alessandra,Smuts CM,Ware Lisa JayneORCID,Dennis CindyLeeORCID,Awadalla Philip,Bassani D,Bhutta ZulfiqarORCID,Briollais Laurent,Cameron D William,Chirwa Tobias,Fallon B,Gray CM,Hamilton JillORCID,Jamison J,Jaspan Heather,Jenkins Jennifer,Kahn Kathleen,Kengne AP,Lambert Estelle V,Levitt Naomi,Martin Marie-Claude,Ramsay Michele,Roth Daniel,Scherer Stephen,Sellen Daniel,Slemming WiedaadORCID,Sloboda Deborah,Szyf M,Tollman Stephen,Tomlinson MarkORCID,Tough Suzanne,Matthews Stephen G,Richter Linda,Lye Stephen

Abstract

IntroductionSouth Africa’s evolving burden of disease is challenging due to a persistent infectious disease, burgeoning obesity, most notably among women and rising rates of non-communicable diseases (NCDs). With two thirds of women presenting at their first antenatal visit either overweight or obese in urban South Africa (SA), the preconception period is an opportunity to optimise health and offset transgenerational risk of both obesity and NCDs.Methods and analysisBukhali is the first individual randomised controlled trial in Africa to test the efficacy of a complex continuum of care intervention and forms part of the Healthy Life Trajectories Initiative (HeLTI) consortium implementing harmonised trials in Canada, China, India and SA. Starting preconception and continuing through pregnancy, infancy and childhood, the intervention is designed to improve nutrition, physical and mental health and health behaviours of South African women to offset obesity-risk (adiposity) in their offspring. Women aged 18–28 years (n=6800) will be recruited from Soweto, an urban-poor area of Johannesburg. The primary outcome is dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry derived fat mass index (fat mass divided by height2) in the offspring at age 5 years. Community health workers will deliver the intervention randomly to half the cohort by providing health literacy material, dispensing a multimicronutrient supplement, providing health services and feedback, and facilitating behaviour change support sessions to optimise: (1) nutrition, (2) physical and mental health and (3) lay the foundations for healthier pregnancies and early child development.Ethics and disseminationEthical approval has been obtained from the Human Ethics Research Committee University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa (M1811111), the University of Toronto, Canada (19-0066-E) and the WHO Ethics Committee (ERC.0003328). Data and biological sample sharing policies are consistent with the governance policy of the HeLTI Consortium (https://helti.org) and South African government legislation (POPIA). The recruitment and research team will obtain informed consent.Trial registrationThis trial is registered with the Pan African Clinical Trials Registry (https://pactr.samrc.ac.za) on 25 March 2019 (identifier: PACTR201903750173871).Protocol version20 March 2022 (version #4). Any protocol amendments will be communicated to investigators, Institutional Review Board (IRB)s, trial participants and trial registries.

Funder

South African Medical Research Council

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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