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Supporting Mothers of Preterm Infants

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Tufts University

Status

Completed

Conditions

PreTerm Birth

Treatments

Other: Limited Financial Support

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03013660
IRB15-3993

Details and patient eligibility

About

Preterm birth is the leading contributor to mortality among children younger than 5 years. One effective and inexpensive intervention is providing skin-to-skin care (STSC) whereby the mother of a preterm baby provides skin-to-skin contact to the newborn for at least a few hours, ideally every day. This intervention can make breastfeeding easier and can improve the health and development of the baby.

Unfortunately, despite the large health benefits, mothers in low-resource communities are often unable to practice STSC due to a range of institutional and economic barriers. STSC requires substantial time and financial commitments from mothers; they must travel from home each day to the hospital to engage in STSC and provide expressed breast milk. Low-income women with access only to limited federally provided unpaid family leave may have to choose between returning to work while their baby is in the NICU and being able to stay at home with their newborn after discharge from the NICU. Families of preterm infants also face direct financial costs of practicing STSC and breastfeeding (such as fees for parking and childcare for older children).

This trial aims to examine the impact of providing additional support to low-income mothers of babies born preterm in 2 hospitals in Massachusetts to help them provide STSC. Half of the participants will be randomized to receive an additional financial support intervention while their infant is in the NICU. The study will examine how this intervention impacts mothers' health behavior while their child is in the NICU and up to three months after.

Most of the current and past policy efforts to increase STSC have focused on the delivery of STSC at hospitals, focusing on supply-side related challenges such as the lack of trained and informed staff. However, interventions that focus exclusively on hospitals are unlikely to be sufficient for low-income women if there are significant opportunity costs or transportation costs to simply being present at the hospital. This study aims to provide more evidence to determine whether removing these financial barriers has the potential to mitigate the poor outcomes of preterm babies born to lower socioeconomic status households.

Enrollment

68 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. mothers who gave (preterm) birth at the study hospitals as well mothers who gave birth elsewhere (e.g. at a hospital without a high-level NICU) but whose babies were immediately transferred to the study hospitals for preterm care after birth.
  2. mothers of children born between 30 and 36 weeks of gestation without any major complications requiring additional or special medical care for mother and child

Exclusion criteria

  1. under the age of 18 years
  2. not currently covered by Medicaid
  3. unable to speak or understand English or Spanish
  4. not residents of the state of Massachusetts
  5. any of the following complications: HIV infection, active tuberculosis, are undergoing radiation therapy, recent breast surgery, indications of illicit drug use currently or during pregnancy (from meconium or cord sample, or urine test), or other contraindications for breastfeeding; or their baby has congenital, surgical, or cardiac anomalies. Note that enrolled women who are identified as using illicit drugs after enrollment will be removed from the study per hospital protocol.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

68 participants in 2 patient groups

Comparison
No Intervention group
Description:
Participants will be provided with standard information about the benefits of STSC and breastfeeding and will be encouraged to come into the NICU every day for at least 1 hour of STSC. To facilitate increased let down of breast milk, all participants will be provided a hospital grade breast pump free of charge during the stay of their babies in the NICU and assistance will be provided to the mothers in procuring a Medicaid covered breast pump to keep when the baby leaves the NICU. The hospital grade breast pump will be provided to her as soon as she enrolls into the study and will remain with her until her baby is discharged or transferred.
Treatment: Limited Financial Support
Experimental group
Description:
Subjects randomized to this arm will be contacted to be informed that they are eligible to receive a weekly financial transfer to help them spend more time with their baby at the NICU. The intervention participants will be eligible to receive this transfer every 7 days, starting on the day of enrollment. The participants selected for the intervention arm will be asked not to discuss the payment with any other study participants (such as the members of any other families they may see at the NICU) or other health care staff at the NICU. Participants will also receive everything that the Comparison group receives.
Treatment:
Other: Limited Financial Support

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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