Risk Reduction Clinical Trial
— SMARTOfficial title:
Social Media And Risk-reduction Training for Infant Care Practices (SMART)
NCT number | NCT01713868 |
Other study ID # | 1R01HD072815-01 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | March 2015 |
Est. completion date | October 2017 |
Verified date | January 2019 |
Source | University of Virginia |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
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.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 1600 |
Est. completion date | October 2017 |
Est. primary completion date | October 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - mothers must live in the US, deliver a healthy infant in one of the study hospitals, plan to take her baby home with her, and be able to receive emails. Exclusion Criteria: - mothers who are not English speaking, whose infant is deceased, those not having custody of the infant, and those whose infants require hospitalization for more than 1 week, or have an ongoing medical problem requiring subspecialty care and mothers who are unable to receive email messages. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Virginia | Boston University, Yale University |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Adherence With Recommended Supine Sleep Position | Hypothesis:For supine sleep position, 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. Outcome measures will be assessed by survey conducted when the infant is 2-5 months of age. | 6 months | |
Primary | Adherence With Recommended Roomsharing Without Bed Sharing | Hypothesis: For roomsharing without bed sharing, 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. Outcome measures will be assessed by survey conducted when the infant is 2-5 months of age. | 6 months | |
Primary | Adherence With Recommended Pacifier Use | Hypothesis: For pacifier use, 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. Outcome measures will be assessed by survey conducted when the infant is 2-5 months of age. | 6 months | |
Primary | Adherence With Recommended Avoiding Use of Soft Bedding | Hypothesis: For each recommended avoidance of soft bedding use, 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. Outcome measures will be assessed by survey conducted when the infant is 2-5 months of age. | 6 months | |
Secondary | Number of Participants Reporting Positive/Nonpositive Attitudes Towards Supine Sleep | Questions assessing attitudes toward sleep position included the mothers' ratings regarding if she believed that each infant sleep position (back, side, stomach) made the baby healthy, safer, more comfortable, and kept the baby from choking. Positive attitudes were defined as having positive attitudes toward the recommended behavior AND not having positive attitudes toward other behaviors (e.g., having positive attitudes towards both supine and side sleep would lead to a categorization of not having positive attitudes towards supine sleep only). | 6 months | |
Secondary | Number of Participants Reporting Positive/Nonpositive Attitudes Towards Roomsharing Without Bedsharing. | Questions assessing attitudes toward sleep location (bedsharing, roomsharing without bedsharing) assessed whether the location was pleasant for the baby and/or mother, safer for the baby, more comfortable for the baby and/or mother, and kept the baby from choking. Positive attitudes were defined as having positive attitudes toward the recommended behavior AND not having positive attitudes toward other behaviors (e.g., having positive attitudes towards both bedsharing and not bedsharing would lead to a categorization of not having positive attitudes towards bedsharing only). | 6 months | |
Secondary | Number of Participants Reporting Positive/Nonpositive Social Norms re Supine Sleep | Social norms were assessed by asking if the people most important to the mother thought that the baby should sleep in each position or location. Positive social norms were defined as having positive norms toward the recommended behavior AND not having positive norms toward other behaviors. | 6 months | |
Secondary | Number of Participants Reporting Positive/Nonpositive Social Norms re: Roomsharing Without Bedsharing. | Social norms were assessed by asking if the people most important to the mother thought that the baby should sleep in each position or location. Positive social norms were defined as having positive norms toward the recommended behavior AND not having positive norms toward other behaviors | 6 months |
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