Last reviewed · How we verify
NCT06024317: MINT-II/HKW
Leveraging Community Health Workers and a Digital Health System to Improve the Timeliness of Child Well Visits
NA trial testing Huduma Kwa Wakati - Knowledge Intervention in Short Message Service (SMS) in 800 participants. Not yet recruiting.
31 July 2027
Quick facts
| Lead sponsor | University of South Carolina |
|---|---|
| Phase | NA |
| Status | Not yet recruiting |
| Study type | INTERVENTIONAL |
| Allocation | randomized |
| Design | parallel |
| Masking | none |
| Primary purpose | health services research |
| Enrollment | 800 |
| Start date | 1 March 2026 |
| Primary completion | 31 July 2027 |
| Estimated completion | 31 July 2027 |
| Sites | 1 location across Tanzania |
Drugs / interventions tested
- Huduma Kwa Wakati - Knowledge Intervention
- Huduma Kwa Wakati - Reminders
- Huduma Kwa Wakati - Incentives
- Huduma Kwa Wakati - Service notifications
Conditions studied
- Short Message Service (SMS) — all drugs for Short Message Service (SMS) →
- Incentives — all drugs for Incentives →
- Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice — all drugs for Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice →
- Preventive Services — all drugs for Preventive Services →
Sponsor
University of South Carolina
Who can join
15 and older, female only, with Short Message Service (SMS) or Incentives. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.
Sponsor's own description
The goal of this cluster-randomized type 1 effectiveness implementation hybrid trial is to evaluate whether a community health worker led, integrated digital health intervention (Huduma Kwa Wakati; "Timely Services" in Kiswahili) can improve rates of timely well visits and receipt of key recommended preventive interventions among children in their first year of life. The hypothesis is that Huduma Kwa Wakati will improve the timeliness and rates of completion of child well visits and receipt of recommended preventive services before age 1 year, compared to the standard of care. Researchers will compare outcomes among children enrolled from intervention clusters and no-intervention comparison clusters. Outcomes will also be compared to a cross-sectional retrospective comparison sample. This study will address the lack of rigorous evidence on the effectiveness of a community-based digital health intervention for promoting rates and timeliness of preventive service receipt among children from sub-Saharan Africa, and identify implementation strategies to facilitate the deployment of integrated community-based digital health interventions in low- and middle-income country settings.
Publications & conference data
1 peer-reviewed publication reference this trial (live from Europe PMC):
-
Leveraging Community Health Workers and a Responsive Digital Health System to Improve Vaccination Coverage and Timeliness in Resource-Limited Settings: Protocol for a Cluster Randomized Type 1 Effectiveness-Implementation Hybrid Study.
Vasudevan L, Ostermann J, Thielman N, Baumgartner JN, et al · · 2024 · cited 1× · PMID 38214956 · DOI 10.2196/52523
Verify or expand the search:
- PubMed search for NCT06024317
- Europe PMC full search
- ASCO Meeting Library
- ESMO Meeting Library
- bioRxiv preprints
- medRxiv preprints
- Google Scholar
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Verify against primary sources
- ClinicalTrials.gov — authoritative US registry record
- WHO ICTRP — international registry index
- EU Clinical Trials Register
- Sponsor press releases (Google)
- Trial protocol + status: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06024317 (US National Library of Medicine, public domain)
- Publications: Europe PMC API search by NCT ID, retrieved 10 June 2026
- Drug + disease cross-links: matched in real time against Drug Landscape's normalised drug + company + condition tables
- Sponsor: as reported to ClinicalTrials.gov by University of South Carolina
- Last refreshed: 26 December 2025
Drug Landscape aggregates and links these public records for informational use only. Always verify against the primary source before clinical or regulatory decisions. Canonical URL: https://druglandscape.com/trial/NCT06024317.
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