Postpartum Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Health Outcomes for New Mothers and Babies
Because adherence to postnatal care guidelines across the United States (U.S.) is poor, newborns and mothers often are placed at undue risk for adverse medical and social outcomes. This study aims to evaluate an alternative model of care and improve healthcare delivery to and reduce health disparities for "well" newborns and mothers after hospital discharge by using single postnatal home nurse visits. The principal investigator has previously shown a reduction in poor outcomes for infants who receive a home visit after discharge when studied retrospectively. The proposed research will build on the previous study and prospectively evaluate the impact of a single home nursing visit on morbidities and health disparities for newborns and mothers in a randomized, controlled trial involving 1154 mother/infant breastfeeding dyads. Home visits should guarantee detailed assessment during an at-risk period of infancy and motherhood, where medical and social problems can be recognized, anticipated, and/or treated, and can bridge the gap between hospital care and primary care. The investigators' program, The Nurses for Infants Through Teaching and Assessment after the NurserY (NITTANY) Initiative, also will consider the cost-effectiveness of home visitation compared with guidelines-adherent outpatient clinic care.
In the NITTANY Initiative the effectiveness of a single postnatal/postpartum home nurse visit
will be evaluated prospectively and compared with outpatient clinic-based care using a
randomized, controlled study design. We will attempt to reduce morbidity in the
neonatal/postpartum period using a well-timed home visit measured first by a reduction in the
need for additional hospital services (inpatient hospitalization and ED visitation) in the
first 14 days after delivery. While healthcare utilization may not be the most important
health outcome for newborns and mothers from a long-term perspective, the demographic groups
at-risk for these outcomes tend to parallel those at greater long-term risk. Also, in the
short-term these outcomes may be the most costly ones for insurance providers and can be used
in a cost-effectiveness analysis to justify home nurse visits. Readmissions and use of urgent
care also may be the most noticeable outcome for clinicians, which should help to modify
practice patterns and improve compliance with guidelines for healthcare delivery.
Over a 3-year period we will prospectively enroll a cohort of 1154 "well" singleton newborns
and their mothers admitted to the hospital nursery that are most at-risk for readmission
based on demographic features. Previous data have indicated those at greatest risk for
adverse health outcomes are infants born to breastfeeding mothers and those with less
parenting experience. Minorities and Medicaid recipients are more likely to suffer from
healthcare disparities. For mothers, morbidities may occur in all socioeconomic groups, but
those undergoing operative delivery or instrument assisted vaginal deliveries tend to suffer
greater morbidity. In this study, patients will be randomized to receive usual, guideline
adherent, post-discharge care with or without a home nurse visit 1-2 days after nursery
discharge. For each newborn and mother, information from the pregnancy, obstetrical record,
and the nursery course will be collected. Data also will be recorded regarding continuity of
care during the perinatal period, hospital readmissions, ED visits, compliance with and
extent of outpatient care, satisfaction with and convenience of care, and costs of
healthcare. Method of infant feeding, maternal confidence, maternal depression and anxiety,
and satisfaction with care will also be assessed.
To accomplish the objectives of this project, we will focus on the following 3 specific aims:
SPECIFIC AIM 1. Establish that single home nursing visits improve healthcare delivery to and
reduce adverse health outcomes for breastfeeding newborns.
This model of home visitation will be shown to reduce postnatal morbidities, improve
compliance with post-discharge guidelines, and reduce disparities in health outcomes for
those enrolled in a prospective trial based on data presented under Preliminary Studies
conducted by the PI. A randomized, controlled trial will be conducted over a period of 36
months to demonstrate that infants that receive a single home visit have a reduced need for
subsequent hospital-based or non-scheduled urgent care services. Secondary outcomes of
importance will include compliance with follow-up guidelines and breastfeeding rates that
also are expected to improve in those receiving a home visit.
SPECIFIC AIM 2. Establish that single home nursing visits improve healthcare delivery to and
reduce adverse outcomes for mothers who are breastfeeding their newborns. Maternal
readmission, emergency department utilization, and need for non-scheduled urgent care
services will be reduced in the group of women receiving a single, postpartum home visit
compared with standard care. Additionally, parenting sense of competence, satisfaction with
postpartum healthcare, level of perceived social support, and the incidence of postpartum
depression and anxiety will be improved among women randomized to receive a home nursing
visit during the stressful and emotional period following childbirth compared with those
randomized to not receive a home visit.
SPECIFIC AIM 3. Prospectively evaluate the cost-effectiveness of a single postnatal home
nursing visit after maternity/nursery hospital discharge.
Data from the trial will be used to perform a stochastic cost-effectiveness analysis to
demonstrate prospectively that a single home nursing visit is cost-effective based upon the
reduction of the need for subsequent hospital or non-scheduled urgent care based services
(inpatient, emergency department, and outpatient) for newborns and mothers in the first 14
postnatal/postpartum days. Again based on the previous retrospective study conducted by the
PI, home visits are expected to be a cost-effective intervention. Other factors including
maternal health outcomes, breastfeeding, and long-term health and social outcomes will be
assessed in terms of their relationship with cost.
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