Risk Reduction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Social Media And Risk-reduction Training for Infant Care Practices (SMART)
The goal of this proposal is to address serious and ongoing challenges related to adherence to public health recommendations known to reduce the risk of SIDS. Adherence has reached a plateau at an unacceptably low level both in the overall US population and especially in Black infants leading to a halt in the decline in infant mortality and a widening in the racial disparity in infant mortality. The current proposal is a collaborative effort that will capitalize on the extensive experience of the investigators in studying barriers to adherence to safe sleep practices to develop two complementary, culturally competent, intervention strategies and to test the effectiveness of each strategy as well as both strategies in combination. Innovative aspects of the Social Media and Risk-reduction Training of Infant Care Practices (SMART) study include its: 1) unique collaboration of leaders in the field; 2) leveraging of the currently operational infant care practices study infrastructure and hospitals; 3) use of two complementary interventions with the potential for synergistic impact; 4) use of social marketing strategies;5) use of mobile technology (mHealth) to deliver messages; and 6) collaboration with community resources and expertise. The SMART study will have four arms in which 16 hospitals are randomly assigned to one of the following study groups: 1) Safe Sleep Nursery Education and Breastfeeding mHealth messaging; 2) Breastfeeding Nursery Education and Safe Sleep mHealth messaging; 3) Safe Sleep Nursery Education and Safe Sleep mHealth messaging; 4) Breastfeeding Nursery Education and Breastfeeding mHealth messaging. A total of 1600 mothers will be recruited (100/hospital), with 400 in each study group. The primary aim is to assess the effectiveness of the interventions aimed at promoting safe sleep practices compared with the breastfeeding control interventions. The secondary aim is to assess potential mediating factors that may explain the intervention effects on infant care practices and that may inform areas for future improved intervention approaches. With the successful completion of the SMART study, effectiveness data will have been provided for two interventions to improve adherence to safe sleep practices that are practical to disseminate nationally in multiple diverse settings.
FOA PAR-11-242 seeks research that will improve the design, implementation, and effectiveness
of interventions to prevent Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) and unintentional
injury-related infant deaths associated with the sleep environment. The SMART (Social Media
and Risk Reduction Training) Infant Care Practices proposal is a collaborative effort among
researchers who collectively have generated much of the data on infant care practices that
underlie the need for this FOA, and who have access to an already existing and operational
infrastructure that permits performance of a large randomized clinical trial to study
preventative interventions. This infrastructure was created for the NICHD-funded SAFE Infant
Care Practices study, for which mothers are being recruited in 2011, 2012, and 2013 at a
nationally-representative group of birth hospitals, with completion of infant care practice
surveys at 2-5 months after birth. These hospitals, which will complete their participation
in SAFE during 2013, are geographically and culturally diverse, will have had 3 years of
baseline infant care practice data collected, and have a proven track record of successful
recruitment. We will use our collective extensive experience studying barriers to adherence
to safe sleep practices to develop two complementary, culturally competent intervention
strategies and to test the effectiveness of each strategy, as well as both strategies in
combination. Both of the proposed intervention strategies, described below, were selected
largely because they can be used in diverse populations and offer the potential to be rapidly
disseminated nationwide.
Nursery Education: A nursery-based training program will be modeled after our successful
pilot study and informed by our collective research on barriers to adopting safe sleep
practices. We will use social marketing strategies to capture the attention of nursing staff
and empower them to improve safe sleep practice modeling and messaging received by mothers
and extended families during the post-partum hospital stay.
mHealth: We will use an innovative approach, using mobile messaging, that applies expertise
in social marketing to provide multiple short culturally competent videos delivered via email
from the end of the post-partum hospital stay through 2 months of age. This strategy will
leverage the internet as a powerful tool to access health information, and mobile devices
(e.g., cell phones), which have made internet access possible for many, particularly those
who are younger, minority, and from lower socioeconomic and educational backgrounds. Using
technology to deliver health-related information is likely to be a well-accepted and
effective strategy, particularly among minority and low-income populations. Indeed, studies
demonstrate that email may be an effective, inexpensive, and time-efficient strategy to
transmit health information.
For each of the safe sleep practice interventions (Nursery Education and mHealth), we will
develop control interventions in which the Nursery Education or mHealth approach is used to
promote breastfeeding. We have chosen breastfeeding as the control intervention because it 1)
is not expected to impact endpoints critical to the assessment of the safe sleep practice
intervention, and 2) provides health promoting messages to control mothers.
In the SMART study, we propose a 4-arm RCT in which 16 hospitals completing participation in
the SAFE study are randomly assigned to one of the following groups (with Safe Sleep
Intervention and/or Breastfeeding Control): 1) Safe Sleep Nursery Education and Breastfeeding
mHealth messaging; 2) Breastfeeding Nursery Education and Safe Sleep mHealth messaging; 3)
Safe Sleep Nursery Education and Safe Sleep mHealth messaging; and 4) Breastfeeding Nursery
Education and Breastfeeding mHealth messaging. We are uniquely positioned to design,
implement and test the effectiveness of these interventions in a methodologically rigorous
way and propose the following specific aims: Primary Aim: To assess the effectiveness of the
interventions aimed at promoting safe sleep practices compared with the breastfeeding
controls.
Hypothesis:For each recommended safe sleep practice (supine sleep position, not bed sharing,
pacifier use, avoiding use of soft bedding), when controlling for other variables, there will
be: a) an increased adherence for mothers who received Safe Sleep Nursery Education; b) an
increased adherence for mothers who received Safe Sleep mHealth messaging; and c) compared to
mothers who received either Safe Sleep Nursery Education or Safe Sleep mHealth messaging
alone, an increased adherence for mothers who received both Safe Sleep Nursery Education and
Safe Sleep mHealth messaging.
Secondary Aim: Assess potential mediating factors that may explain the intervention effects
on infant care practices and that may inform areas for future improved intervention
approaches.
Hypothesis: Changes in variables within each of the domains of the Theory of Planned Behavior
(Attitudes/Beliefs, Social Norms, Perceived Control) will be mediators of the effectiveness
of safe sleep interventions.
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