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Conflict Between Maternal Autonomy and Child Health in Substance-use

L

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

Status

Completed

Conditions

Substance Abuse, Intravenous
Opioid-Related Disorders
Amphetamine-Related Disorders
Substance-Related Disorders
Marijuana Abuse
Cocaine-Related Disorders
Inhalant Abuse
Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome
Pregnancy, High-Risk
Pregnancy
Alcohol-Related Disorders

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02797990
201264 (Other Identifier)
10890
FI0816115 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Qualitative project, comprising open-ended semi-structured interviews with healthcare workers, who provide antenatal care to substance-using women.

Full description

Maternal substance use during pregnancy (including legal and illicit substances) is a fairly common global phenomenon, including in the UK. This can have significant effects on pregnancy, infant outcome and enduring consequences into adolescence. Babies born with neonatal abstinence syndrome may spend months in neonatal care units, requiring complex, 24hour care. Here, healthcare workers may experience conflict between preserving maternal autonomy, and the challenge of caring for a withdrawing newborn.

However, there is discrepancy between the objectives of policy-makers "Reducing the harm to children from parental problem drug use should become a main objective of policy and practice" and those recommended in healthcare "These women need supportive and coordinated care during pregnancy." Therefore, conflict arises between mother-centred and child-centred models of caring for pregnant women who use substances.

The objective of the proposed project is to investigate how healthcare workers providing treatment for pregnant women who use illicit substances perceive their duty of care and whether they experience tension between the conflicting objectives of mother-centred and child-centred approaches through semi-structured qualitative interviews. The investigators will explore the ways in which healthcare workers frame problematic substance misuse in pregnant women, what they perceive to be the major challenges in providing care and their views on the responsibility of a mother to have a healthy baby. The main hypothesis is that healthcare workers providing care for pregnant women engaging in problematic substance misuse experience conflict between mother-centred and child- centred approaches to care.

Enrollment

6 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Healthcare workers will be recruited based on their employment status; they must currently provide some form of antenatal are for women who engage in problematic use of substances (limited to illicit drugs, excluding tobacco and alcohol).
  • Healthcare workers will not be restricted by age, and all genders will be included. As the research is qualitative, a representative same is unnecessary.

Exclusion criteria

  • Healthcare workers will be excluded if they do not have experience of providing ante-natal care for women who engage in problematic substance misuse (limited to illicit drugs, excluding tobacco and alcohol) during their pregnancy.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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