ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Perinatal Nurse Home Visiting Enhanced With mHealth Technology

Johns Hopkins University logo

Johns Hopkins University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Domestic Violence
Intimate Partner Violence

Treatments

Behavioral: Standard IPV Assessment
Behavioral: Standard DOVE Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT01688427
1R01HD071771-01 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
NA_00051481

Details and patient eligibility

About

This research is being done to test whether mobile technology will reduce possible communication barriers between women and their home visitor; to improve assessing for health problems that could affect their pregnancy; to help in the delivery of information and actions to improve the health of the woman and their child.

Full description

This study addresses PA-11-104 calling for Reducing Health Disparities among Minority and Underserved Children. The Institute of Medicine, World Health Organization and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recognize that prenatal home visitation, which improves the well-being of mother and children, presents an opportunity to provide early intervention to reduce intimate partner violence (IPV) and the impact the exposure has on the children. Major challenges for nurses and other home visitors (HV) are to accurately identify abused women and facilitate their accessing resources needed to change their situation. HVs often find it difficult to assess and intervene for IPV in the intimacy of home settings. The use of mHealth technology may increase the sensitivity of screening instruments and reduce communication barriers between HVs and clients regarding IPV, as well as enhance implementation of IPV interventions and allow for a more standard delivery of an intervention. Building on the successful trial testing the DOVE IPV intervention in prenatal home visiting programs (NR009093), the investigators propose to test mHealth technology using an open-source application, eMOCHA, to improve assessment of IPV and to deliver the DOVE intervention. The proposed eMOCHA DOVE study will first (Specific Aim/Phase 1) compare sensitivity and specificity of two different approaches for IPV assessment; paper and pencil versus the eMOCHA mHealth technology. Phase 2 (Aim 2) will compare effectiveness of the DOVE intervention delivered in standard form (paper brochure) versus mHealth eMOCHA DOVE application. In Phase 1 women enrolled in a perinatal home visiting program and consenting to the study, will be randomized to one of the two assessment groups and assessed for IPV at enrollment, birth and 2 months post birth. Women who are IPV positive (IPV+) at any of the assessment times will be re-randomized to receive the DOVE intervention by one of the two approaches. 1600 Medicaid eligible pregnant women in a perinatal home visiting program (800 from urban Baltimore and 800 from rural Virginia) will be recruited for Phase I and 400 IPV+ women (200 from each site) for Phase II. Women participating in Phase 2 will receive 6 home visit interventions over 6 months. Maternal outcomes related to IPV and mental health and selected infant outcomes will be collected at enrollment, 3, 6, 12, and 18 months after entry into Phase 2. Specific Aim 1 will use logistic and linear regression models to examine the proportion of women experiencing IPV through mHealth technology versus paper and pencil on the same validated assessments. Specific Aim 2 (comparing effectiveness of two intervention administrations) will be assessed with logistic and linear regression models for categorical (proportion abused and premature infants) and continuous outcome variables (e.g. depression, frequency and severity of physical, psychological, sexual IPV, use of community resources) respectively. Study findings will assist nurse home visitation programs to use best approaches for routine assessment of IPV and implement empowerment interventions to reduce IPV and improve maternal infant health outcomes.

Enrollment

433 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

15 to 45 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Pregnant women in Baltimore, Virginia, and Missouri if needed.
  • Speak English or Spanish
  • Eligible for home visitation.

Exclusion criteria

  • Women who begin participation in a perinatal home visiting program after the baby is born.
  • Women who do not speak English or Spanish.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

433 participants in 2 patient groups

Standard IPV Assessment
Experimental group
Description:
Test the effectiveness of the eMOCHA DOVE application using mHealth technology for routine assessment of IPV vs. Pencil and paper.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Standard IPV Assessment
Standard DOVE intervention
Experimental group
Description:
The standard DOVE intervention has already been developed and tested (NR009093). The standard DOVE intervention is a brochure based 10 minute intervention that the home visitor reviews with the women. It consists of information about IPV, its effects on pregnancy and infant health, community resources and a plan for individual safety options. For the eMOCHA DOVE intervention, the DOVE 10 minute brochure intervention will be converted from the paper format to a visually colorful interactive presentation loaded into the home visitor device using the eMOCHA application. The format will be completely activated and implemented by the women. She uses small ear buds and a touch screen, so how she responds and interacts with the media enhanced eMOCHA DOVE intervention is private.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Standard IPV Assessment
Behavioral: Standard DOVE Intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems