View clinical trials related to Prenatal Care.
Filter by:The Preemie Prep for Parents (P3) mobile intervention will be tested in an outpatient population of pregnant women at risk of preterm birth and their partners. The study is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing knowledge and preparedness for decision making between a group receiving the P3 texts and videos and a group receiving links to American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) prematurity patient education handouts.
In 2015, the average Ethiopian woman had a 1 in 64 lifetime risk of death due to complications of childbirth and 87,414 newborns died before their 28th day of life. Demand for MNCH services, however, remains low in Ethiopia's rural communities most at risk with only 16% of women delivering in a health facility. The investigator's project responds to the challenge of creating demand for existing MNCH services in rural Ethiopia, which fell short of reaching Millennium Development Goal targets for reducing preventable maternal and neonatal deaths. This study addresses two strategic drivers to prevent maternal mortality identified by USAID including improving individual, household, and community behaviors and norms and increasing equity of access and use of services by the most vulnerable. The primary objective of the study is to determine the impact of a behavior change intervention that partners Ethiopian Orthodox priests with members of the Health Development Army (HDA) and trains them to conduct maternal health outreach to increase births attended by skilled health personnel among women who attend ≥1 ANC visits.
A midwife-led continuity model of care was implemented in governmental maternal facilities in Palestine. Midwives from the hospitals provided outreaching caseload ante- and postnatal care to women in rural villages clinics and homes. This study investigated if the model had impact on important maternal and neonatal health outcomes. A retrospective cohort design was used.
This study is investigating whether use of postpartum family planning (PPFP) increases if messages on PPFP and, if desired, PPFP services are integrated into as many contacts as possible between women/couples and the health system during pregnancy and the first year after birth. Health system contacts may be at health facilities (including antenatal, labor and delivery, postnatal, and child immunization visits) or, with Ethiopia's Health Extension Program, at households or health posts in the community.
Women who take opioid substitution therapy have higher rates of unintended pregnancy, more pregnancies, and a higher risk of pregnancy complications than the general population. Current practice is to test for pregnancy only at patient request or if the clinician suspects pregnancy. This study will compare monthly pregnancy testing to current practice in a double blind randomized control trial. As many women of childbearing age as possible will be recruited from the Hamilton Clinic for Opioid Substitutional Therapy. Women assigned to the intervention will have monthly testing at the same time as their monthly urine drug testing at the clinic. The primary objective is to assess if there is a significant difference is early pregnancy detection and the secondary objectives are to assess differences in pregnancy disposition and gestational age at entry to prenatal or abortion care.
Objective: This randomized and controlled trial was aimed at exploring the effect of a new mentalization-focused 4D interactive ultrasound and a week-by-week pregnancy diary intervention with substance-abusing pregnant women. Method: Pregnant women referred to the hospital maternity outpatient clinic from primary health care due to substance abuse were recruited to participate in a randomized and controlled study. At admission, a psychiatric nurse offered all eligible women an opportunity for participation. A written informed consent was obtained from all participants included in the study. The participants were randomized into the intervention and control groups using a computer-generated block-randomization with block size of four. A separate randomization assignment was used for women in medication-assisted treatment for opioid dependence. The intervention group subjects were offered three mentalization-focused interactive 4D ultrasounds at 24, 30 and 34 gestational weeks and a mentalization-focused week-by-week pregnancy diary combined with three antenatal sessions and an option for one diary session after delivery. The control group received active treatment as usual in an obstetric tertiary setting. The pregnant woman and the child were followed-up until the child was one year old. The primary outcome was prenatal maternal depressive symptoms post-intervention, and secondary outcomes were anxiety symptoms, prenatal parental mentalization, maternal-fetal attachment and substance abuse. Other outcomes were utilisation of prenatal care, perinatal outcome, neonatal withdrawal symptoms and neonatal neurobehavior, postnatal maternal depressive and anxiety symptoms, parental mentalization, experienced stress from parenting and experienced social support, and emotional connection and commitment with the baby. The study was conducted at the hospital maternity outpatient clinic for substance-abusing pregnant women at Turku University Hospital (Finland) between October 2011 and December 2015. The registration of the trial is made retrospectively, but the research plan and outcomes are reported in this registration as they were originally documented in the research plan approved by The Joint Ethics Committee of the University of Turku and the Hospital District of Southwest Finland on 14th of June 2011.
This study evaluates the effectiveness of prenatal counseling when verbal counseling is supplemented with a multi-media mobile application versus a written gestational age handout.
The quality of antenatal care (ANC) in much of sub-Saharan Africa is constrained by severe resource and staffing shortages. The investigators adapted and piloted an evidence-based model of group antenatal care as an innovative way to improve ANC service delivery and increase health promotion. This pilot will be conducted in Malawi and Tanzania and will provide data to prepare for a large randomized controlled trial to document the impacts that group antenatal has on perinatal health outcomes. This study will ultimately inform policy and practice aimed at improving quality of antenatal care through respectful and woman-centered care to pregnant women.
Perinatal outcomes in the US rank behind most other developed countries even though women in the US utilize more maternity services. Current approaches to consultation and collaboration among perinatal care providers, including nurse-midwives, obstetricians, and perinatologists, fragment care resulting in communication errors and maternal dissatisfaction. The CARE study will test an innovative interdisciplinary consult visit to improve communication, teamwork, maternal satisfaction, and perinatal outcomes.
This study seeks to assess the impact of the MenCare+/Bandebereho fathers'/couples' group education intervention on men's attitudes towards, and participation in, sexual and reproductive health, maternal, newborn and child health, and equitable and non-violent relationships with their children and partners.