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About
Early developmentally-based behavioral intervention has well-established positive effects and is recommended as the standard of care to support early brain maturation, health, and development. However, few neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) provide this early intervention. H-HOPE (Hospital to Home: Optimizing the Preterm Infant's Environment) has established efficacy, and has a standardized protocol, making it ready for widespread implementation. The infant-directed component of H-HOPE provides Auditory (voice), Tactile (moderate touch massage), Visual (eye to eye), and Vestibular (rocking) stimulation starting when infants are ready for social interaction. The parent-directed component of H-HOPE includes participatory guidance and support to help parents engage with infants in the NICU and the transition to home. In this NIH-funded research, H-HOPE improved growth, developmental maturity and mother-infant interaction, and reduced initial hospitalization costs and acute care visits through 6-weeks corrected age. This research tests whether H-HOPE can be implemented and sustained in five diverse NICUs, using a Type 3 Hybrid design to evaluate both implementation processes and effectiveness. The specific aims are to: 1) Identify the degree of implementation success; 2) Evaluate the effectiveness of H-HOPE for infants, hospital costs from H-HOPE enrollment until discharge, and parents, compared to a pre-implementation comparison cohort; and 3) Determine influences (facilitators and barriers) associated with implementation success and H-HOPE effectiveness, guided by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). An incomplete stepped-wedge design guides staggered roll-out for five clinical sites. Each NICU completes the CFIR implementation steps (Planning and Engaging, Executing, and Reflecting and Evaluating), followed by 6 months of Sustaining. For Aim 1, degree of implementation success is determined every two months as Sustainability (still offering H-HOPE), Reach (% of eligible parent/infant dyads receiving H-HOPE) and Degree of Implementation (mean H-HOPE services received per parent-infant unit) (primary implementation outcomes). For Aim 2, effectiveness is analyzed using generalized linear mixed models for infant, cost, and parent outcomes (primary outcomes: infant growth at discharge and acute care visits from discharge to 6-weeks corrected age). Propensity score analysis is used to make the pre- and post-implementation comparable. For Aim 3, a mixed methods analyses is used to identify influences from H-HOPE records and interviews that are associated with implementation success and effectiveness at each site and across sites. This is the first time implementation in a NICU is guided by the evidence-based CFIR framework, and results will make a major contribution to implementation science. This study will produce an evidence-based implementation strategy and Toolkit to disseminate nationwide. Widespread H-HOPE implementation will make a significant change in clinical practice and improve preterm infant health and health care costs.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
There are two cohorts of infants and parents: the Pre-H-HOPE Comparison Cohort and H-HOPE Cohort. H-HOPE is a family intervention, so parent(s) and infants are recruited together and must meet both parent and infant eligibility criteria. Infant and parent eligibility criteria are the same for both cohorts (Pre-H-HOPE and H-HOPE). Additionally, there are criteria for hospital personnel.
Inclusion criteria for the infant:
Inclusion criteria for the parent (up to 2 per infant can be in the study:
Inclusion criteria for hospital personnel:
Hospital Administrator - staff member with an administrative role outside of the NICU leadership who is knowledgeable about the activities of the NICU NICU Manager - Nurse or physician with an administrative role in the NICU (e.g. medical director or nurse manager) H-HOPE Team member - staff member who is part of the H-HOPE Team NICU Staff Nurse - registered nurse who provides direct patient care and works a minimum of 50% in the NICU Exclusion Criteria We will not be limiting any participants based on sex/gender, or ethnic/racial identity. Differences due to race and gender will be accounted for during data analysis. We will be limiting enrollment to English or Spanish speaking parents due to the limited availability of valid measures for data collection in languages other than English and Spanish. However, we anticipate that we will still be able to recruit an ethnically diverse group of parents because of the ethnic composition of the parents at the sites and our prior experience.
Exclusion criteria for the infant:
Exclusion criteria for the parent:
Exclusion Criteria for NICU Staff Nurses:
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1,882 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Claire Walsh, BA; Rosemary White-Traut, PhD,RN,FAAN
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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