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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02989766
Other study ID # 25115
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received October 18, 2016
Last updated November 17, 2017
Start date August 20, 2015
Est. completion date July 27, 2017

Study information

Verified date November 2017
Source St. Louis University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This intervention would be a series of self-help-style educational and motivational activity sheets for patients to complete independently. This will be a randomized clinical control trial.

Subjects will complete a pre delivery questionnaire and a postpartum questionnaire. Subjects in the intervention arm will complete 3 activity sheets prenatally during their wait time at the clinic. The first worksheet can be completed the day of recruitment after consent is signed.

Subjects will be contacted by phone at 3 and 6 months postpartum to assess long term duration of breast feeding.


Description:

As the benefits of human milk become evident, the investigators are striving to improve the breastfeeding (BF) rate among new mothers. In April and May of 2014, 73 (71%) of well babies received human milk at discharge from our postpartum unit, with 40 (35%) and receiving human milk exclusively. In the neonatal intensive care unit, 83 (89%) received human milk during those months.

Many of the patients at the teaching institution share risk factors for failure to BF, including poverty, obesity, unplanned pregnancy and being African American. Efforts have had limited effect in improving initiation and duration among these patients.

Studies examining the efficacy of various modalities of antenatal education produced modest results in improving initiation and duration of BF. Several studies examined group BF education versus routine prenatal care without significant differences in initiation, exclusivity (the practice of using human milk exclusively and not supplementing with formula) or duration. Conversely, other study showed a difference in initiation with group education and showed a difference in exclusivity. Formalized education compared to routine clinical practice education did not result in a difference in exclusivity in several studies and neither did a program that included a video showed a difference in initiation with formal education.

A few studies compared peer counseling to routine prenatal care. One small study of 59 women found an increase in initiation rate, while a larger study of 2511 women did not find a difference in initiation or duration.

Other studies found no significant difference in initiation, duration or exclusivity with an educational program on practical BF skills nor a program on BF attitudes. A small study that paired BF education with material incentives increased exclusivity. Three studies comparing interventions by lactation consultants found no difference in initiation or duration, although one study showed improvement in exclusivity. Postpartum BF self-efficacy correlates with BF duration and two studies showed improvement in exclusivity with a BF class based on principles of self-efficacy. These studies based their intervention on Bandura's theory of self-efficacy, which proposes that an individual's expectation of personal efficacy will determine her initiation of coping behavior, effort expenditure and duration of persistence. This theory recognizes four components that contribute to an individual's sense of self- efficacy, and these include performance accomplishment, vicarious, or social, experience, verbal persuasion and psychological state. developed a validated scale at measuring prenatal maternal self-efficacy in breastfeeding.

These two studies used a teaching approach that assumes that pregnant women are adults who are self-motivated and have past experience that shapes their learning and are a component to their perception of self-efficacy.

Printed self-help materials are appealing as a low cost intervention that could be widely implemented. Furthermore, a large study among pregnant women showed that a self-help guide that is particularly tailored towards pregnant women could be effective in promoting another healthy behavior modification: smoking cessation. Potentially this method could be effective when used to prepare mothers for breastfeeding.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 335
Est. completion date July 27, 2017
Est. primary completion date July 27, 2017
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender Female
Age group 14 Years to 55 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Patients < 32 weeks gestation.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patient who have not had an ultrasound confirming viable intrauterine pregnancy.

- Patients beyond 32 weeks gestation will be excluded as some are unlikely to return for a sufficient number of prenatal visits to complete the intervention.

- Patients with medical contraindications to breastfeeding such as HIV or active substance abuse.

- Patients planning to take medications in the postpartum period that are incompatible with breastfeeding such as anti-metabolites.

- Patients giving birth to a nonviable infant.

- Patients without adequate reading and writing skills to complete the questionnaires and activity sheets.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Education on Breast Feeding
Subjects in the intervention arm will complete 3 activity sheets prenatally-study related.

Locations

Country Name City State
n/a

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
St. Louis University

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary improving duration of BF. It was propose using a 3-part prenatal self-help guide to educate and prepare mothers for breastfeeding. 16 Months
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