MedPath

Expanding Rural Access to Breastfeeding Support Via Telehealth: The Tele-MILC Trial

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Breastfeeding
Interventions
Behavioral: Telelactation services
Registration Number
NCT02870413
Lead Sponsor
RAND
Brief Summary

The investigators will conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to generate data on the impact of direct-to-consumer "telelactation" (virtual breastfeeding support) services. We will explore the feasibility, acceptability, and impact of these services. Postpartum mothers age 18 and older who have initiated breastfeeding will be recruited at a critical access hospital without access to IBCLCs in rural Pennsylvania and randomized into two study arms: 1) outpatient telelactation services via video calls on personal devices or 2) usual care. Data on breastfeeding duration and exclusivity, as well as perceptions and satisfaction with breastfeeding, will be captured via surveys and in-depth interviews and compared across groups.

Detailed Description

Increasing breastfeeding rates is an ongoing public health priority because of the health and economic benefits for infants, mothers, and communities. Professional lactation support, specifically by International Board Certified Lactation Consultants (IBCLCs), increases breastfeeding duration and exclusivity. Rural and underserved mothers have lower breastfeeding rates, and limited access to professional lactation support may contribute to this disparity. As such, the Surgeon General identifies increasing access to IBCLCs as a policy priority. Virtual "telelactation" consults that use two-way video have the potential to increase access to IBCLC services in rural settings that lack them. Several companies have begun to offer telelactation through a direct-to-consumer (DTC) model, where patients initiate video calls with providers using their personal devices including mobile phones, tablets, and laptops. While four studies with small samples explored the use of antiquated videoconferencing technology (i.e., that required dedicated equipment) for lactation support, no research has studied DTC telelactation or linked telelactation with breastfeeding outcomes. To address this evidence gap, the investigators will conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to generate data on the feasibility, acceptability, and impact of DTC telelactation services. Postpartum mothers age 18 and older who have initiated breastfeeding will be recruited at a critical access hospital without access to IBCLCs in rural Pennsylvania and randomized into two study arms: 1) outpatient telelactation services via video calls on personal devices or 2) usual care. Data on breastfeeding duration and exclusivity, as well as perceptions and satisfaction with breastfeeding and with telelactation services, will be captured via surveys and in-depth interviews and compared across groups. This study will be the first experimental evaluation of telelactation and the first ever evaluation of DTC telelactation services. The results will inform policy debates about reimbursement and regulation of DTC telehealth services and the strengths and limitations of this model of healthcare delivery as applied to breastfeeding. It also has the potential to promote breastfeeding, one of the most widely recommended health behaviors among underserved families, and improve children's health in rural settings.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
203
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria
  1. Prisoners, incarcerated individuals, detainees, parolees, probationers will be excluded because there may external circumstances outside of their control that may prevent continuous breastfeeding.
  2. Mothers and infants will be excluded if they have maternal, fetal, or neonatal conditions or complications with the potential to physiologically compromise breastfeeding or milk supply (e.g., infant cardiac defects, post-partum infant ventilator dependence), and or contraindications to breastfeeding as specified by the American Academy of Pediatrics (e.g., HIV+ status).

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Telelactation supportTelelactation servicesParticipants in the experimental group will receive unlimited, free telelactation visits with lactation consultants (IBCLCs) as demanded up to 12 weeks post-partum. Services will be available through mobile phone app.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Any breastfeeding (yes/no) at 3 monthsThree months
Exclusive breastfeeding (yes/no) at 3 monthsThree months
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Breastfeeding satisfaction (self-reported via questionnaire at 3 months postpartum)Three months

Survey question which captures extent of satisfaction with the experience of breastfeeding. Question reads: How satisfied do you feel about the experience of breastfeeding your baby over the past three months? (Very unsatisfied, somewhat unsatisfied, neither unsatisfied nor satisfied, somewhat satisfied, very satisfied). We will create a binary variable (satisfied vs. unsatisfied) based on this response, with those reporting "somewhat satisfied" or "very satisfied" defined as "satisfied."

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

RAND Corporation

🇺🇸

Arlington, Virginia, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath