Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02987803
Other study ID # IRB16-1371
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date August 15, 2019
Est. completion date June 30, 2021

Study information

Verified date October 2021
Source Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH)
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The investigators aim to conduct a randomized controlled trial of women who are pregnant or considering pregnancy to understand whether women provided with specific data on hospital-level cesarean delivery rates are more likely to select higher quality hospitals, defined as hospitals with cesarean delivery rates below the Federal HealthyPeople 2020 target of 23.9%.


Description:

The choice of a childbirth provider is one of the most consequential decisions a pregnant woman makes. The hospital she delivers at is a better predictor of many treatment decisions than her own risks or preferences. For example, choosing the wrong hospital can increase the risk of cesarean delivery up to 10-fold. Cumulatively, avoidable cesarean deliveries are estimated to cause 20,000 major surgical complications, $5 billion in spending, and unmeasured pain each year in the United States. The proposed project aims to prevent these harms by empowering women to choose hospitals with risk-appropriate cesarean delivery rates. Preliminary research indicates that the majority of women may not understand how hospital-level quality data applies to them personally. In a test sample of 1,000 demographically diverse pregnant mothers, over half do not know if hospital-level cesarean delivery rates are important, and the overwhelming majority do not know if obstetrical infection rates, maternal or neonatal birth trauma rates, or hospital quality metrics are important when selecting their hospital. The investigators will conduct a randomized controlled trial of women using Ovia Health mobile applications to track their fertility or pregnancy to understand whether women provided with location-specific cesarean delivery rate data along with education about the importance of hospital-level cesarean delivery rates are more likely to select higher quality hospitals than women provided with education alone. The study is labeled double blind, but the investigators recognize uncertainty on this framework. Though subjects will be exposed to different information they do not know they were in a trial. At the point that outcomes are collected, researchers will not know which group the subject was randomized because outcomes are self-reported.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 120621
Est. completion date June 30, 2021
Est. primary completion date June 30, 2021
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Female
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Ovia Fertility users that are trying to conceive and are not infertile or Ovia Pregnancy users within the United States in their first trimester who have NOT chosen a delivery hospital or provider. Exclusion Criteria: - People who do not use Ovia Health mobile applications, Ovia Pregnancy users beyond the first trimester of their pregnancy, Ovia Fertility users that are not infertile (as defined by women under 35 that have been trying for more than 12 months, and women over 35 that have been trying for over 6 months) and Ovia Pregnancy/Fertility users who have selected their delivering hospital or provider.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Data
The tool displays star ratings of hospitals on how labor-friendly they are. The star ratings (1 through 5) are based on hospital-level cesarean delivery rates. The data comes from The Leapfrog Group and is supplemented by publicly available state data. The data displayed will be customized to the users geographic location.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Harvard School of Public Health Boston Massachusetts

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) Harvard Medical School (HMS and HSDM)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Hospital Selection Enrollees will be asked to self-report the hospital where they delivered. Hospitals will be categorized into a five-star quality rating scale based on the corresponding quintile of their cesarean section rate at the state level, as reported to the Leapfrog Group and other state data sources. Our primary outcome will be the average star rating of hospitals selected by control and intervention group enrollees. We will also report the proportion of enrollees in each group selecting hospitals of each star rating, as well as selecting hospitals that do not report their cesarean section rate. Up to 12 months
Secondary Knowledge of Hospital-Level Differences Participants' response to a survey question about thinking there are differences in cesarean delivery rates between hospitals in their community Up to 12 months
Secondary Hospital Impact on Cesarean Delivery Risk Participants' response to a survey question about thinking the hospital they choose will impact their chances of having a cesarean delivery Up to 12 months
Secondary Use of Rates in Hospital Selection Participants' response to a survey question about looking at cesarean delivery rates when choosing their childbirth hospital Up to 12 months
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Terminated NCT03772886 - Reducing Cesarean Delivery Rate in Obese Patients Using the Peanut Ball N/A
Completed NCT03631329 - Predictability of Preoperative Carotid Artery Corrected Flow Time for Hypotension After Spinal Anesthesia in Patients Undergoing Cesarean Section
Completed NCT03244540 - Regional Analgesia After Cesarean Section Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT03760718 - Chloroprocaine Lavage to Improve Outcomes Related to Operative Cesarean Delivery Early Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT04965779 - The Effect of Abdominal Binder Use on Postpartum Pain, Bleeding, and Breastfeeding Success in Cesarean Delivery Women N/A
Terminated NCT01687972 - INSORB Versus Subcuticular Sutures at Cesarean Section Phase 1
Withdrawn NCT01211431 - Post-cesarean Pain Control Via Continuous Infusion of Ropivacain et Diclogenac Into the Wound Versus Intathecal Morphine Phase 4
Completed NCT00987701 - Perineuraxial Anesthesia Fluid Management and Infant Neurobehaviors N/A
Completed NCT00991627 - Different Approaches to Maternal Hypotension During Cesarean Section Phase 4
Completed NCT01049477 - The Effects of Music Therapy on Women's Anxiety Before and During Cesarean Delivery N/A
Terminated NCT00524511 - Comparison Study of Wound Closure at Time of Cesarean Delivery: Dermabond Glue Versus Surgical Staples N/A
Terminated NCT00386477 - Vaginal Cleansing at Cesarean Delivery to Reduce Infection: A Randomized, Controlled Trial N/A
Completed NCT00375986 - A Comparison of Manual vs. Spontaneous Removal of the Placenta at Cesarean Section N/A
Completed NCT00517140 - Vaginal Birth After Caesarean Section - Effect on Maternal Psychosocial Function N/A
Terminated NCT05051150 - Epinephrine Infusion for Prophylaxis Against Maternal Hypotension During Caesarean Section Phase 4
Terminated NCT03695172 - Comparison of TAP, Anterior QL, or ESP Block for Elective Cesarean Section Phase 4
Recruiting NCT06247852 - Persistent Pain After Cesarean Delivery - A Danish Multicenter Cohort Study
Completed NCT06012747 - Pain After Cesarean Section - A Danish Multicenter Cohort Study.
Not yet recruiting NCT05187520 - Naldebain for Control of Post-Cesarean Section Pain Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT04999670 - Fascial Closure and Post-caesarean Pain N/A

External Links