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Web-based Preconception Health Education Tool

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) logo

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Reproductive Health

Treatments

Behavioral: MyFamilyPlan

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02529527
IRB#15-001313

Details and patient eligibility

About

Strong evidence supports that preconception care, or care to optimize a woman's health health prior to pregnancy, can improve birth outcomes. Preconception health counseling covers a broad range of topics, including: desire for pregnancy, obstetric history, nutrition, vaccinations, sexual health, chronic disease, substance abuse, mental health and contraception. Despite calls from public health organizations and experts in the field for universal access to preconception care, most US women do not receive any health counseling to prepare for pregnancy. Given that approximately half of US pregnancies are unintended, it is critical that routine primary care serve as a venue for the provision of this important service. From a patient's perspective, improving preconception health involves many health behavior changes. As such, patient engagement and education regarding preconception health must be a primary focus. Several preconception health promotion tools have been developed for patients to date; few are truly patient-centered and even fewer have been rigorously evaluated.

This study presents MyFamilyPlan - a novel, web-based, patient centered preconception health education tool designed for women of reproductive age receiving primary care. MyFamilyPlan is truly innovative in two key ways:

  • MyFamilyPlan is a web-based preconception health self-assessment. This will allow for the employment of skip logic to individualize the questionnaire and subsequent health recommendations for each patient.
  • Recognizing that preconception care is relevant to all women "at risk" of pregnancy, MyFamilyPlan has been designed for utilization in a primary care setting.

This preconception health education tool will be tested using a randomized controlled design. This study will measure whether or not exposure to MyFamilyPlan promotes the discussion of preconception health issues in primary care encounters (primary outcome). It will also evaluate whether the intervention affects participant self-efficacy in planning a healthy pregnancy, and relevant health behaviors (secondary outcome). The study proposed here will improve the quality of evidence for preconception health education tools. Should it demonstrate effectiveness, it will also result in a new tool that could be made more widely available to promote preconception health.

Enrollment

292 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 45 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • 18-45 years of age
  • English-speaking
  • Non-pregnant
  • Capable of pregnancy (i.e., no previous hysterectomy or sterilization procedure)
  • Scheduled primary care visit in health system in the upcoming 7-10 days
  • Active email address

Exclusion Criteria;

  • Currently pregnant

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

292 participants in 2 patient groups

MyFamilyPlan
Experimental group
Description:
Web-based health education tool (interactive self-assessment) provided for participant completion 7-10 days prior to a scheduled primary care visit.
Treatment:
Behavioral: MyFamilyPlan
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Standard preconception health education document provided for participant review 7-10 days prior to a scheduled primary care visit.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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