View clinical trials related to Maternal Care Patterns.
Filter by:See https://studypages.com/s/healthy-moms-study-765273 This individual-level randomized trial involves pregnant women followed for at least 6 months after delivery, to compare the effects of providing two "attention-control" counseling interventions designed to increase pregnant women's awareness of either: 1. the maternal health benefits of breastfeeding, or 2. the health benefits of smoke-free homes
To compare the use of magnesium sulfate for 12 hours versus 24 hours in postpartum women with pre-eclampsia with severe features , to ensure maximum efficacy of anticonvulsant action that can be achieved with least exposure to Mgso4 side effects.
The number of women who are incarcerated in the U.S. has increased dramatically over the past 20 years-over 750%, or from 13,258 in 1980 to 111,616 in 2016. Arkansas incarcerates 92 women per 100,000 population compared to 57 per 100,000 average across all states, ranking the state as the 8th highest in the nation. Over 75% of incarcerated women are of childbearing age and about 4% are pregnant upon intake. However, little is known about the population of women who have become incarcerated while pregnant in Arkansas - including the outcomes of these women and their children and how these outcomes may vary in relation to services that are received during incarceration. This research study aims to first expand knowledge on incarcerated women in Arkansas by using administrative data to retrospectively examine the health status and outcomes of pregnant women who were incarcerated in state prison by Arkansas from June 1, 2014 to May 31, 2019 (a five-year cohort; Aim 1). Then, we will lay the groundwork for and subsequently analyze data on outcomes and perspectives of women who have been incarcerated in Arkansas while pregnant (Aims 2 and 3). We will also seek to understand the feasibility and acceptability of elements of an enhanced support program for incarcerated pregnant women recently launched via a collaboration between Arkansas Department of Corrections and UAMS.
The World Bank and the government of Nigeria are implementing a results-based financing (RBF) project for the states of Nasarawa, Adamawa, and Ondo. This project provides incentives for improving performance at critical levels within the Nigerian health system and aims to address some of these challenges. The primary goal of the impact evaluation of this project is to determine if providing financial incentives linked directly to performance increases the quantity and quality of maternal and child health (MCH) services. In each of the three selected States,the project finances the following interventions: 1. Performance incentives to State Government and Local Government (LGA) agencies that are triggered by Disbursement Linked Indicators (DLIs) that reflect strengthened supervision and enhanced operational support for improving health systems performance. These performance incentives would be paid out on an annual basis. 2. In half of the LGAs in each state, one facility per ward will receive Performance-Based Financing (PBF) wherein payments are made directly to individual health facilities based on the quantity and quality of a set of pre-defined services provided by each facility. These performance incentives would be paid out on a quarterly basis. 3. In the other half of the LGAs in each state one facility per ward will receive Decentralized Facility Financing (DFF) or equivalent financing that is not be linked to any service delivery targets. These payments would be made on a quarterly basis. The evaluation of the PBF arm, which consists of making payments to health facilities conditional on performance, but within an environment of comparable levels of overall financing, will rely on experimental assignment. The effect of the PBF intervention will be identified by comparing outcomes in the LGAs receiving PBF versus those receiving DFF in the three project states. In each of these three States, the LGAs will be randomly assigned to either the PBF package or to the DFF package.
This is a multicenter observational study of implementation of postpartum contraceptive counseling and provision into the maternity care setting in Colombia, South America. The primary aim is to determine proportion of uptake of highly-effective contraceptive use after these methods become available immediately postpartum. Secondary aims include rapid repeat pregnancy rates, use of other types of contraception, breastfeeding continuation, and visualization of IUD strings after immediate postpartum placement.
Mothers with symptoms suggesting clinical depression can be identified and potentially motivated to seek further care during pediatric visits for their young children. The best ways for pediatric providers to encourage mothers to seek further evaluation and treatment for their depressive symptoms are not known. The investigators plan to provisionally optimize a pediatric office-based intervention that the investigators developed to motivate mothers who may be depressed to seek further care and, thereby to improve the well-being of women from diverse backgrounds and their children.
Rationale: Every year, 287,00 million women, and 3.1 million neonates continue to die, and the majority of these deaths have been identified as being avoidable. A proxy indicator of Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 5, birth with skilled attendance is low in Sub-Saharan Africa(47%) and the lowest (13%) is for Ethiopia, with the greatest number of maternal deaths. The Ethiopia health system has established a vast network of health infrastructure that extends to rural areas with the establishment of over 15,000 health posts and deployment of over 30,000 health extension workers throughout the country. Although these unprecedented situations made health services more accessible than ever, it is yet to be exploited for improving rural women's access to clean and safe delivery and postpartum care. Lack of usage of delivery care in the country is related not only to accessibility but also acceptability of the services. In fact, the vast majority of women with home deliveries saw institutional delivery as "unnecessary" and a "non-customary practice". Therefore, instituting an innovative, culturally sensitive, and practically amenable strategy, deployment of CORNs for example might be the best remedy, in this case. Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness and acceptability of availing Home based Skilled Birth Attendance (SBA) Services through Community Reproductive Health Nurses (CORN) in rural communities of Ethiopia. Study design: Cluster Randomized Controlled Community Trial that will be conducted in four phases. Study population: Study participants will be all pregnant women who will give birth at home and health facility (including health post) during the study period. Intervention: The study will be conducted in four phases as discussed below. During the first (preparatory) phase, sensitization of relevant stakeholders and recruitment of trainees will be conducted. In the second phase, formative and baseline assessment as well as training of CORNs will take place. In the third phase, which will be actual intervention phase, deployment of CORNs in their respective study site will be done and in the final phase, final evaluation and dissemination of study findings will be done. The intension behind deploying CORNs to the grassroots level is just to give a backup skilled delivery and other MNH services to poor rural mothers who have difficult of accessing modern health facilities for various reasons; it has no any intention to promote or encourage home deliveries or replace institutional deliveries. Perhaps it will help to assimilate rural mothers to modern health facilities Main study parameters/endpoints: The main study end point is percentage of skilled birth attendance which is very low in local and national level. In addition secondary study parameters are percentage changes of maternal & related services uptakes. These include focused Antenatal; care (ANC), long term family planning, Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV (PMTCT) and postnatal care. Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: the burden and risks associated with participation to the study is very minimal. To mention few; physical examinations (Leopold manoeuvre) or the routine investigations of pregnancy this will be anonymous except for the CORNs keeping the principles of shared confidentiality in mind. Similarly all questionnaires or medical charts will be kept confidential. All CORNs will obtain intensive training on ethical principles that will help to minimize any physical and physiological discomfort associated with participation, the risks associated with the investigation treatment. The study period and Budget: the study will be carried out in a total of 18 months which holds a period from the development of protocol to the terminal evaluation and submission of reports. The overall study budget will be 99, 987.95 USD (Ninety nine thousands, nine hundred eighty seven dollars and ninety five cents
Low income mothers of young children represent a disadvantaged group who are at exceptional risk for depressive syndromes and who have increasingly limited access to mental health services. The proposed project is designed to evaluate Mom-Net, an internet-facilitated cognitive-behavioral(CBT) intervention for depression, adapted from Lewinsohn's Coping with Depression Course, and tailored to mothers of young children. Mom-Net, which was developed and piloted in an recently completed NIMH-funded investigation (MH070426), was designed to overcome the substantial barriers to treatment participation that exist for mothers experiencing economic hardship and those in rural communities. Though the pilot trial demonstrated that the program was very effective in reducing depressive symptoms and related difficulties, it was conducted under the 'idealized' conditions typical of initial intervention tests (e.g., computers and internet connections were supplied to all participants; access to the internet was provided by a single browser; coaches who provided weekly phone support were research staff, and initial recruitment and motivational interviews sessions were conducted via home visits to participants). These conditions likely facilitated recruitment and retention of participants, as well as ease and fidelity of treatment delivery. Thus one goal of the current project is to evaluate the intervention under conditions that are closer to those of real-world service providers and recipients. The current project is also intended to provide a more rigorous test of the intervention than did the pilot in a number of ways. Participants in the pilot trial will be 300 mothers of 3-5 year old children recruited through Head Start classrooms and prescreened for the presence of elevated depressive symptoms.Subsequent to the pre-intervention assessment, participants will be randomized to either the intervention or facilitated usual care (FUC) condition. The evaluation of the intervention will focus on maternal depressive symptoms, parenting behavior, and child adjustment. Two follow-up assessments (at 12-month and 24-month intervals) will enable us to examine maintenance of effects. Overall, the investigation will contribute to the evidentiary base regarding the dissemination potential of this empirically-supported intervention, adaptations to which have the potential to enable a greater proportion of the population to access and benefit from it.