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Improving Pediatrician Counseling About Infant Safe Sleep Using the Electronic Medical Record

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Johns Hopkins University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Sudden Unexplained Infant Death
Sudden Infant Death

Treatments

Other: Standard of Care (SOC)
Behavioral: ISA-MI

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05503771
R01MD015818 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
IRB00333492

Details and patient eligibility

About

The study team will evaluate the impact of an Infant Sleep Assessment (ISA) tool with motivational interviewing (MI) communication training on clinician-parent communication during 2-month Well Baby Visits (WBV) and parent reported and observed infant sleep practices. The study team's hypotheses are that 1) clinicians who utilize the ISA with MI training will more effectively communicate safe sleep information to their patients' parents, and 2) these parents will have safer infant sleep practices than parents whose clinicians are in a standard of care control group.

Full description

This research addresses the problem of unsafe infant sleep practices that increase the risk of Sudden Unexplained Infant Death (SUID), which includes Sudden Infant Death Syndrome and Accidental Suffocation and Strangulation in Bed. The study team will examine how a unique health information technology (HIT) tool impacts patient and provider outcomes when implemented in a pediatric primary care clinic serving a socioeconomically disadvantaged population that is primarily Black/African American. The study team's HIT tool - the Infant Sleep Assessment (ISA) - was developed through prior NIH-funded work and builds on the team's track record of innovative injury prevention research with parents and pediatric health care clinicians. During well-baby visits, the ISA assesses parents' reported sleep practices for their newborns. Using a programmed algorithm, the ISA identifies risky infant sleep practices and generates associated suggested feedback messages for the clinician that are derived from behavior change theory. This information is delivered via the electronic medical record (EMR) for the clinician's use during routine anticipatory guidance. To maximize the ISA's effectiveness, clinicians (pediatric residents) will receive a brief training in communication skills that are derived from Motivational Interviewing (MI). The study team will evaluate the impact of the ISA with MI communication training on clinician-parent communication during 2-month Well Baby Visits (WBV) and parent reported and observed infant sleep practices. The study team's hypotheses are that 1) clinicians who utilize the ISA with MI training will more effectively communicate safe sleep information to their patients' parents, and 2) these parents will have safer infant sleep practices than parents whose clinicians are in a standard of care control group.

Enrollment

350 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

3 days to 75 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • English and Spanish-speaking parents and legal guardians bringing their infants to the Harriet Lane Clinic (pediatric primary care clinic) for any of their early well baby visits (between 3-5 days up to 4 weeks of age)
  • Maryland recognizes teen parents as emancipated minors, so they will be eligible to provide consent and participate.

Exclusion criteria

  • Infant is considered medically complex (e.g., serious congenital anomaly, requires cardiorespiratory monitoring, etc.)
  • Assigned resident is not enrolled in the study

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

350 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Group: ISA-MI
Experimental group
Description:
The ISA-MI study condition involves, in addition to the standard of care described for the SOC group, a clinician training activity related to using the ISA (Infant Sleep Assessment) tool. Clinicians assigned to the ISA-MI Group will view a 20-30-minute recorded video training session on infant safe sleep (including its epidemiology, risk factors and recommendations), use of the ISA tool, and use of motivational interviewing-inspired (MI) communication skills to respond to ISA parent responses. The ISA tool builds on the 2022 AAP infant sleep recommendations and will be implemented at the 2-month WBV. Parents/patients of physicians in the ISA-MI study condition will also be given several infant safe sleep related products that facilitate compliance with safe sleep recommendations, namely, a portable crib, a sleep sack and a pacifier.
Treatment:
Behavioral: ISA-MI
Control Group: Standard of Care (SOC)
Other group
Description:
The SOC study condition consists of WBVs that follow the usual practice of American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Bright Futures Health Supervision Guidelines and includes age- and developmentally based anticipatory guidance. As part of their training, pediatric residents receive formal teaching on core aspects of providing primary care to infants, including the AAP recommendations on safe sleep. This includes the recommended ABCS: babies should sleep Alone (no objects or people), on their Back (supine), in a Crib (or safe alternative including portable crib or bassinet), and in a Smoke-free environment.
Treatment:
Other: Standard of Care (SOC)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Eileen M McDonald, MS; Marisa Cordon Villa de Leon, MPH

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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