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The goal of this pilot randomized controlled trial is to determine whether a 6-month behavioral health intervention with a Nurturing Care Family Navigator (NCFN) improves levels of food security among postpartum low-income Medicaid or uninsured women identified as having very low or low food security in the past 12 months. We hypothesize that a behavioral health intervention applying a multisectoral nurturing care navigation approach facilitating access to health, nutrition, early learning, responsive care, and security and safety resources is likely to decrease levels of maternal-child food insecurity. The main question it aims to answer is:
Researchers will compare levels of food security among those receiving a navigation behavioral health intervention (consisted of 1:1 tailored navigation session and an educational workbook) compared to those receiving an educational workbook with messages across the four pillars of food insecurity (standard of care).
Participants will:
Full description
The Nurturing Care Family Navigator (NCFN) is a social behavioral health intervention inspired by the Nurturing Care Framework which provides an evidence-based roadmap across and within five components (i.e., health, nutrition, early learning, security and safety, and responsive caregiving) to transform child rights into equitable actions to address threats and promote optimal early childhood development. We hypothesize that applying a multisectoral nurturing care navigation approach facilitating access to health, nutrition, early learning, responsive care, and security and safety community resources is likely to decrease levels of maternal-child food insecurity.
The NCFN is the navigation program under investigation. NCFN is a comprehensive barrier-focused and long-term family-centered intervention that will offer screenings for food insecurity, referrals to community resources, and follow-up with families experiencing very low or low food security in the past 12 months assessed using the 8-item Abbreviated Child and Adult Food Security Scale (ACAFSS). The NCFN program is grounded in the Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) aiming to support families in overcoming barriers within and across the four pillars of food security (i.e., food availability, access to food, utilization, and stability). The goal of the NCFN is to increase knowledge (cognitive factors) and self-efficacy (behavioral factors) to navigate barriers across the four pillars of food insecurity by securing enrollment and sustaining engagement with a set of community nurturing care services (environmental factors) to improve levels of food security, and ultimately maternal-child health and nutrition outcomes of low-income families during the postpartum phase.
The target population for the randomized controlled trial will consist of (1) low-income Medicaid or uninsured families with an infant one week postpartum attending the well child visit at a Pediatric clinic through UNLV Health; (2) identified as having very low or low food security in the past 12 months; and (3) residing within one of our focus zip codes (89101, 89106, 89030, 89031, 89032). The intervention group will receive the NCFN program that will support families through 15 one-on-one sessions over 6 months after enrollment (a total of 15 sessions with 12 sessions in the first 3 months and 3 sessions in the last 3 months) and one year of follow up evaluation with a research assistant. The control group will receive an education workbook package and one year of follow up evaluation with a research assistant. Participants will undergo surveys at enrollment, three, six, and 12 months after enrollment (i.e., baseline, T2, T3, T4). Additionally, the research team will conduct interviews with navigators as well as clinical and non-clinical providers.
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72 participants in 2 patient groups
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Gabriela Buccini, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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