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<title>PhD Theses</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/659</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 07:40:31 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-16T07:40:31Z</dc:date>
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<title>Community-based interventions to prevent serious complications and premature death after spinal cord injury in Bangladesh</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/662</link>
<description>Community-based interventions to prevent serious complications and premature death after spinal cord injury in Bangladesh
Hossain, Mohammad Sohrab
Abstract&#13;
Spinal cord injury (SCI) causes serious disability and mortality. Mortality following SCI is &#13;
higher in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) than high-income countries (HICs), &#13;
although accurate data on morality are not yet available from LMICs including Bangladesh. &#13;
Anecdotal evidence suggests that many people with SCI in Bangladesh die soon after &#13;
discharge, and those who survive experience life-threating secondary health complications&#13;
and impoverishment. The most common secondary health complications are pressure &#13;
ulcers. These are largely preventable and manageable if people have appropriate access to &#13;
support and advice. Prevention of pressure ulcers and other secondary complications is a&#13;
better alternativethan treatment for people with SCI in Bangladesh and other LMICs where &#13;
specialised care following discharge is limited. However, people with SCI need support and &#13;
adequate knowledge following discharge about self-care management to prevent and &#13;
manage their complications.I proposed, developed and tested a community-based model of &#13;
care to help and support people with SCI after discharge.It primarily involved telephone based advice and support supplemented with a few home visits which can be easily &#13;
provided in a LMIC like Bangladesh. My hypothesis was that this community-based model of &#13;
care could help people with SCI to prevent and manage their complications after discharge &#13;
from hospital. This model of care may be a more viable alternative than other models of &#13;
community-based support post-discharge in Bangladesh where health care services are &#13;
insufficient and it is often difficult for people to access specialised care. However, no study &#13;
has investigated the effectiveness of this model of care. Similarly, no study has looked at &#13;
survival post-discharge. I sought to address these knowledge gaps in my thesis.13&#13;
My thesis includes a cohort study designed to determine five-year survival in people with &#13;
SCI in Bangladesh following discharge from hospital and to develop a prediction model for &#13;
those at high risk of death. The cohort study also looked at the health status and quality of &#13;
life (QoL) of these people six years after discharge. My thesis also includes a randomised &#13;
controlled trialcalled the CIVIC trial,designed to determine the effectiveness of a low-cost &#13;
community-based intervention to support people with SCI who were recently discharged &#13;
from hospital in Bangladesh. The acronym CIVIC was derived from the title of the trial, &#13;
namey –Community-based InterVentions to prevent serIous Complications following spinal &#13;
cord injury in Bangladesh.Three protocols were developed as a part of the CIVIC trial; these &#13;
are (i) a protocol for the CIVIC trial,(ii) a protocol for the process evaluation of the CIVIC trial, &#13;
and (iii) a Statistical Analysis Plan (SAP) for the CIVIC trial.The protocol for the CIVIC trial was &#13;
developed prior to my doctoral degree, and the latter two protocolswere developed as a &#13;
part of my doctoral degree. Moreover, a cross-sectional study was conducted from the &#13;
baseline data of the CIVIC trial to determine the level of impoverishment following SCI in &#13;
Bangladesh. The summary of the cohort study and CIVIC trialare provided in the next &#13;
section. Both studies had multiple publications associated with them.
PhD Thesis
</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 24 Aug 2020 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2020-08-24T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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