Breastfeeding Clinical Trial
— BEST4BabyOfficial title:
Breastfeeding Education Support Tool for Baby
NCT number | NCT03533725 |
Other study ID # | 17F.517 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | March 11, 2019 |
Est. completion date | June 30, 2020 |
Verified date | May 2022 |
Source | Thomas Jefferson University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
This study will compare data associated with breastfeeding experiences and outcomes--specifically, breastfeeding continuation after initiation, exclusivity for 6 months of an infant's life, and breastfeeding duration--among 120 subjects recruited late in pregnancy and provided peer counseling and education services incorporating mobile health (mHealth) tools during a period of at least 6 months post-delivery with the data collected from a control group of approximately 120 mothers that did not receive the study intervention.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 247 |
Est. completion date | June 30, 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | May 31, 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 18 Years to 50 Years |
Eligibility | A. Peer counselors Inclusion Criteria: Personal experience with breastfeeding - Residence in an intervention cluster Exclusion Criteria: - Failing to participate in peer counselor education/training provided for the study B. Intervention Pregnant women-mothers Inclusion Criteria: - Willingness to consent to assignment to a breastfeeding peer counselor and to participate in counseling and education visits - Residence in an intervention cluster and intent to remain in the intervention area for a minimum of 6 months post-delivery Exclusion Criteria: - Pregnant women-mothers that indicate before delivery that they will not initiate breastfeeding C. Control Subjects Inclusion Criteria: - Mothers delivering during the study period that live in a non-intervention area that has been designated for recruitment of control subjects - Willingness to participate in a survey enabling collection of data for comparative purposes Exclusion Criteria: - None |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
India | Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College | Belgaum | Karnataka |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Thomas Jefferson University | Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College |
India,
Charantimath U, Bellad R, Majantashetti N, Washio Y, Derman R, Kelly PJ, Short V, Chung E, Goudar S. Facilitators and challenges to exclusive breastfeeding in Belagavi District, Karnataka, India. PLoS One. 2020 May 4;15(5):e0231755. doi: 10.1371/journal.p — View Citation
Short VL, Bellad RM, Kelly PJ, Washio Y, Ma T, Chang K, Majantashetti NS, Charantimath US, Jaeger FJ, Lalakia P, Goudar SS, Derman R. Feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary impact of an mHealth supported breastfeeding peer counselor intervention in r — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Breastfeeding initiation soon after birth | Maternal subjects' compliance with the recommendation to initiate breastfeeding soon after delivery | Ideally within an hour following a normal delivery | |
Primary | Exclusivity of breastfeeding during the first 6 months following an infant's birth | Maternal subjects' compliance with the recommendation to provide only breast milk | First 6 months following an infant's birth | |
Primary | Breastfeeding continuation (along with supplemental feeding) after an infant reaches 6 months of age | Maternal subjects' compliance with the recommendation for continued breastfeeding along with supplemental feeding after an infant reaches 6 months of age | As the study is time-limited, assessment will occur 6-9 months following an infant's birth | |
Secondary | Usability rating of the mHealth tools by peer counselors post-training | Peer counselors will complete a scale, mHealth Tools Usability Scale for Peer Counselors
Information relevant to this scale: Likert scale with 10 statements associated with usability: 5 positive and 5 negative Range of responses 1. Strongly Disagree, 2. Disagree, 3. Neutral/No Opinion, 4. Agree, 5. Strongly Agree Scoring: For positive items, the score contribution is the scale position number minus 1; and for negative items the contribution is 5 minus the scale position number. All scores are totaled and multiplied by 2.5, resulting in a total score per subject of 0-100. With this scoring method the higher the score, the greater is usability of the mHealth tools as perceived by the peer counselors after training but before actual use with mothers. Scale is based upon one initially developed and tested by Digital Equipment Corporation; items have been slightly modified to achieve a better match with the BEST4Baby pilot. |
At the end of counseling education/training (project months 8-9) | |
Secondary | Usability rating of the mHealth tools by peer counselors based on use with mothers | Peer counselors will complete a scale, mHealth Tools Usability Scale for Peer Counselors Based Upon Use with Mothers
Information relevant to the scale: Likert Scale with 10 statements associated with usability: 5 positive and 5 negative Range of responses 1. Strongly Disagree, 2. Disagree, 3. Neutral/No Opinion, 4. Agree, 5. Strongly Agree Scoring: For positive items, the score contribution is the scale position number minus 1; and for negative items the contribution is 5 minus the scale position number. All scores are totaled and multiplied by 2.5, resulting in a total score per subject of 0-100. With this scoring method the higher the score, the greater is usability of the mHealth tools.as perceived by peer counselors based upon use with the mothers. The scale is similar to the one for Secondary Outcome Measure 4 (and is similar to the referenced Digital Equipment Corporation scale). |
Once peer counselors complete delivery of services to assigned maternal subjects (by months 22-23 of the project) | |
Secondary | Acceptability rating of BEST4Baby program features by mothers | Maternal subjects will utilize a scale, Mothers Acceptability Rating Scale for BEST4Baby Program Features
Information relevant to this scale: Likert Scale with 10 statements associated with features of the BEST4Baby program: 5 positive and 5 negative (related to peer counselor, home visits, educational modality, etc.) Range of responses 1. Very unacceptable, 2. Unacceptable, 3. Neutral/No Opinion, 4. Acceptable, 5. Very Acceptable Scoring: For positive items, the score contribution is the scale position number minus 1; and for negative items the contribution is 5 minus the scale position number. All scores are totaled and multiplied by 2.5, resulting in a total score per subject of 0-100. With this scoring method the higher the score, the more acceptable were program features to the maternal subject. |
3 months post-delivery | |
Secondary | Satisfaction rating of mothers with BEST4Baby counseling and education services as delivered | Maternal subjects will complete a scale, Mothers Level of Satisfaction with BEST4Baby Services as Delivered
Information relevant to this scale: Likert Scale with 10 statements associated with level of satisfaction with BEST4Baby counseling and education services as delivered: 5 positive and 5 negative Range of responses 1. Very unsatisfied, 2. Unsatisfied, 3. Neutral/No Opinion, 4. Satisfied, 5. Very Satisfied Scoring: For positive items, the score contribution is the scale position number minus 1; and for negative items the contribution is 5 minus the scale position number. All scores are totaled and multiplied by 2.5, resulting in a total score per subject of 0-100. With this scoring method the higher the score, the more satisfied the subject was with the counseling and education services as delivered. |
6-9 months post-delivery |
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