View clinical trials related to Stillbirth.
Filter by:Each year more than 26,000 pregnancies in the United States end in stillbirth (late fetal death at >20 weeks of gestation). A 2011 issue of the Lancet, dedicated entirely to stillbirth, recognized it as a "too-often-ignored" public health problem despite occurring once in every 160 pregnancies. The death of a baby is highly traumatic and can incite negative mental, emotional, and physical health consequences lasting years after the loss. Bereaved mothers with stillbirth have a 4-fold higher risk of depression and 6-fold higher risk for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). These mental health consequences are likely to negatively affect subsequent pregnancies, many of which occur within the first year after loss (50-98%). Inter-conception care is provided to women of reproductive age between pregnancies; however, few interventions focus on PTSD symptomatology and its related comorbidities in bereaved mothers. Treatment for bereaved mothers may include psychiatric medication and/or referral to support groups. Because bereaved mothers with stillbirth may have additional mental and physical health risks, pharmacological interventions are typically a first and sole line of treatment and may not sufficiently allay bereaved mothers' emotional distress. Moreover, women may be trying to conceive or may have already conceived and report reticence to taking medication. Additionally, support groups with little emphasis on coping may not be helpful for some grieving mothers. Non-pharmacological approaches, such as yoga, may be an alternative option for bereaved women with stillbirth. Yoga has been established as an effective, safe, acceptable, and cost effective approach to improving mental health in a variety of populations, including pregnant and post-partum women. Yoga has also been used as a means to cope with PTSD associated with surviving a traumatic event (i.e., interpersonal violence, military veterans). The investigators are unaware of any studies that have explored yoga to reduce PTSD in bereaved mothers with stillbirth. Furthermore, online streaming yoga (on-demand videos played in the home) has recently grown in popularity and may address the unique barriers that women experiencing stillbirth may have. To reduce PTSD symptoms and its co-morbid conditions (i.e., anxiety and depression) the investigators propose to develop and test the feasibility and acceptability of a home-based, online streamed yoga intervention (www.udaya.com) for bereaved mothers with stillbirth.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the role of an integrated strategy at selecting fetuses for delivery at term based on a combination of fetal biometry and cerebroplacental ratio (CPR) to reduce stillbirth rate and adverse perinatal outcome.
This study is a pilot study taking place in Moshi, Tanzania at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre (KCMC). The study aims to introduce fetal scalp stimulation into the intermittent auscultation protocols at KCMC, and to validate whether or not a handheld Doppler device can perform the fetal scalp stimulation test accurately.
Women who have experienced a stillbirth or neonatal death are at higher risk of repeated poor neonatal outcomes if they have short interpregnancy intervals. Understanding the attitudes surrounding future fertility and contraception in this population is critical to propose socially and culturally acceptable interventions to address an unmet need for family planning. Participants: Women who have experienced a stillbirth or early neonatal death will be recruited from the postnatal ward of Bwaila Maternity Hospital in Lilongwe, Malawi. Procedures (methods): This will be a qualitative study using 20 in-depth interviews and four focus group discussions of up to 10 women each.
Every day in Ghana, 47 babies are stillborn (SB) and 232 babies are born with low birth-weight (LBW) - many of whom will die in infancy or suffer lifelong consequences. Sleeping on the back during pregnancy has recently emerged in scientific literature as a potential risk factor for SB and LBW. In fact, one of the earliest studies to demonstrate this link was conducted in Ghana by investigators on this protocol. When a woman in mid-to-late-pregnancy lies on her back, her large uterus compresses one of the major veins that delivers blood back to her heart and may completely obstruct it. This may result in less blood being returned to her heart and less blood being pumped to her developing fetus. Such changes may negatively impact the growth of her fetus and, along with some other risk factors, may contribute to the death of her baby. The investigators have developed a device, 'PrenaBelt', to significantly reduce the amount of time a pregnant woman spends sleeping on her back. The PrenaBelt functions via a simple, safe, effective, and well-established modality called positional therapy. The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of the PrenaBelt on birth-weight and assess the feasibility of introducing it to Ghanaian third-trimester pregnant women in their home setting via an antenatal care clinic and local health-care staff. Data from this study will be used in effect size calculations for the design of a large-scale, epidemiological study targeted at reducing LBW and SB in Ghana and globally.
Back and right-sided sleeping position in pregnant women has recently emerged as a potential risk factor for low birthweight (LBW) and stillbirth (SB) in the medical literature. Assuming that sleep position in pregnant women is modifiable, the same literature has indicated that this risk factor is modifiable; however, there is no evidence that this risk factor is truly modifiable. The proposed link between back and right-sided sleeping position in a pregnant woman and LBW and SB of her baby is multifactorial; however, it ultimately implicates the woman's body position in causing compression of one of the large veins that brings blood back to her heart. This compression, along with other factors relating to the woman, her placenta, and her developing fetus, may result in decreased blood flow (nutrition and oxygen) to her developing baby, which, depending on the extent and duration, could result in LBW or SB of her baby. If the back sleeping position during pregnancy has a causative role in LBW and subsequently SB, the literature indicates that up to 17% of LBW and consequently 26% of SB could potentially be prevented by changing position to avoid back sleep. Note that 20 million LBW and 2.6 million SB occur each year worldwide. Positional therapy (PT) is a safe and effective intervention for preventing people who snore or people who's breathing pauses during sleep from sleeping on their back - a position that makes their condition worse. The most basic form of PT modifies a person's sleeping position by either: - Preventing them from sleeping on their back through restricting their movement, or - Rather than restricting movement, significantly reducing the amount of time they spend sleeping on their back by applying pressure points to their body while they are on their back, which eventually causes them to shift into a different position and avoid lying on their back. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the ability of a PT intervention to modify the position of pregnant women from their back and right side to their left side while they sleep in late pregnancy. This study will help determine whether this potential risk factor is modifiable by way of a PT intervention, and whether it is feasible to intervene to reduce or prevent back and right-sided position sleep in late pregnancy. Demonstrating that the sleeping position of pregnant women can be modified through use of a simple, inexpensive PT intervention may be one of the keys to achieving significant reductions in LBW and late SB rates in Canada and worldwide.
This is a descriptive study to determine the role of fetal GBS disease as a cause for stillbirths
OVERALL OBJECTIVE In an East African referral hospital, to develop and analyze the effect of locally agreed and achievable guidelines and a continual in-house training program for strengthening partogram-based monitoring-to-action during labour. INTERVENTION Paper partograms (WHO), locally developed labour management guidelines (the PartoMa guidelines) and continual in-house education. OVERALL DESIGN A quasi-experimental pre-post-study (The PartoMa study). SETTING Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Mnazi Mmoja Hospital, Zanzibar. POPULATION Labouring women delivering at the study site from October 2014 to January 2016 and their offspring, as well as health providers. Women and their offspring will be enrolled at/after unset of labour and followed until discharge. ENDPOINTS The primary composite endpoint is stillbirths and birth asphyxia. For further description and secondary outcomes, please see below. STUDY TIME Data collection from October 2014 to January 2016, supplemented by a post-exit collection of case file data from October 2016 - January 2017.
A novel handheld Doppler has been developed which is rugged and is powered only by a hand crank. This study aims to test the use of this Doppler versus the Pinard horn to monitor the fetal heart rate in labour in a hospital setting in Uganda. The investigators propose that with its ease of use, both for the woman and midwife, midwives using the Doppler will identify more babies in need of prompt delivery and the risk of stillbirth and neonatal mortality will decline. In the research study, the investigators will compare the risk of stillbirths and neonatal mortality in two randomized groups of labouring women. The second part of the study consists of an audit of the documentation in labour by midwives. The partograph is an uncomplicated, low cost form on which observations during labour are documented. It includes three sections of information: fetal condition, maternal condition and labour progress. Although the use of a partograph during labour is strongly recommended by the WHO, there are limited published systematic evaluations of the correct use of the tool. The investigators aim to use this randomized trial design to assess rates of intrapartum stillbirth and neonatal mortality in the first 24 hours after delivery, and assess the quality of partographs comparing two groups. This trial will provide insights on the potential benefits of using handheld Doppler devices for intrapartum monitoring, and the audit of partograph quality will provide insights to improve care during labour. This study hypothesizes that the quality of partograph completion and of fetal heart rate monitoring may systematically differ between the Doppler and Pinard groups.
Obesity is a growing problem in East London and every other woman who enters pregnancy is obese or overweight. In addition to obesity, other metabolic risk factors such as raised lipids, high blood pressure and diabetes increase pregnancy related complications such as preeclampsia and long term problems such as heart diseases, stroke and death. Preeclampsia, presenting as hypertension and proteinuria is a leading cause of maternal and fetal mortality and morbidity. Interventions that reduce cardiovascular events by modifying risk factors also have the potential to reduce the risk of preeclampsia. The investigators work funded by the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) in the UK showed that dietary interventions in obese pregnant women may reduce the risk of preeclampsia. The investigators propose to show that pregnant women with metabolic risk factors derive the most benefit from a simple, targeted intervention based on Mediterranean dietary pattern to reduce the risk of maternal and fetal complications . Women with the risk factors (1230 women) will be randomly allocated to dietary intervention or usual antenatal dietary advice and the risk of maternal and fetal complications will be evaluated. The remaining eligible women who are consented for lipid tests, but do not have metabolic risk factors, will be followed up for outcome data only. Diet based interventions, especially those based on a Mediterranean dietary pattern has a potential to reduce the risk of preeclampsia. In the investigators study, pregnant mothers with risk factors will be randomly allocated to either a dietary invention or usual antenatal care and they will assess their composite maternal (pre-eclampsia or gestational diabetes) and fetal (stillbirth, small for gestational age or admission to neonatal intensive care unit) outcomes. The investigators will tailor the intervention to suit the individual needs of the mother and provide nuts and olive oil to improve compliance. The study will be undertaken across the three maternity units at Barts Health NHS Trust, which delivers 17,000 women/year and two other maternity units in England. The study is supported by the office of the Mayor of Tower Hamlets which will facilitate the involvement of grassroots workers to promote recruitment and uptake of the intervention.