Effective Caregiving for Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome: Testing an Instructional Mobile Technology Platform for High-Risk Pregnant Women
- Conditions
- Opioid-use DisorderNeonatal Abstinence Syndrome
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Mobile-based NAS Caregiving Tool
- Registration Number
- NCT04783558
- Lead Sponsor
- Washington State University
- Brief Summary
Most newborns experiencing Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) require non-pharmacologic care, which entails, most importantly, maternal involvement with her newborn. To facilitate positive maternal-newborn interactions, mothers need to learn effective caregiving NAS strategies while they are pregnant, yet, an enormous gap exists in the early education of mothers on the symptoms and progression of NAS, in part because no interventions exist to prepare future mothers for the challenges of caring for their newborns at risk for NAS. In this project, the investigators propose to adapt an existing mobile NAS tool for high-risk pregnant women and assess its usability, acceptability, and feasibility in a small randomized controlled analog trial.
- Detailed Description
Due to an alarming rise in opioid use among the general population that is mirrored in pregnant women, Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) rates have increased in the US from 2004 to 2014. Most newborns experiencing NAS require non-pharmacologic care, which entails, most importantly, maternal involvement with her newborn. Facilitating postpartum maternal-newborn involvement is critical in preventing further adverse maternal-newborn outcomes. To achieve positive maternal-newborn involvement, mothers need to learn effective caregiving NAS strategies while they are pregnant. Surprisingly, current obstetrical practice standards for high risk pregnant women do not address this pressing need, in part because no interventions exist to prepare future mothers for the challenges of caring for their newborns at risk for NAS. To address this critical gap, the investigators propose to adapt an existing mobile NAS tool for clinician training and decision support, for high-risk pregnant women and assess its usability, acceptability, and feasibility in a small randomized controlled analog trial. First, the investigators will conduct semi-structured interviews with a panel of neonatology experts, NAS care providers, and mothers with NAS-affected babies to gather their recommendations on management of NAS and explore their perspectives on the care of these newborns. Findings will guide the adaptation of the existing mobile NAS tool for high-risk pregnant women. The investigators will then test the usability, acceptability, and feasibility of the adapted mobile tool via surveys with 10 pregnant women receiving opioid agonist therapy (OAT) at Spokane Regional Health District's Opioid Treatment Program and Evergreen Recovery Center. Finally, the investigators will randomize 30 high-risk pregnant women seen at these facilities to either receive the adapted mobile NAS caregiving tool or usual care. The investigators will compare these mothers on maternal drug relapse and OAT continuation, maternal-newborn bonding, length of newborn hospital stays, readmission rates, breastfeeding initiation and duration, and postpartum depression and anxiety at 4, 8, and 12 weeks postpartum. Findings will serve as pilot data for a subsequent large R01 randomized controlled analog trial testing the efficacy of the adapted NAS caregiving tool in reducing poor outcomes for NAS-affected newborns and their mothers.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- Female
- Target Recruitment
- 30
- Pregnant woman in the third trimester currently in OAT treatment for opioid use disorder
- 18 years of age or older
- Ability to speak and understand English.
• Recurring (e.g. daily or almost daily) thoughts of harming themselves or others in the past 2 weeks.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Adapted NAS tool Intervention Mobile-based NAS Caregiving Tool Pregnant women in this condition will receive the adapted mobile-based NAS instructional tool and TAU. Women in this condition will go through the NAS instructional tool at least once during pregnancy, with their choice of going through the modules gradually while waiting at the OAT clinic to receive their dose, or by scheduling a time to review the modules. Participants will have free online access to the tool throughout their third trimester as well as through 12-weeks postpartum so they can access the modules at any time, and as many times as desired, including after giving birth.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in maternal drug relapse 4, 8, & 12 weeks postpartum Change will be assessed via the Addiction Severity Index-Lite (ASI-LITE), a standardized semi-structured clinical interview that offers clinical information and assesses severity profiles in the following domains: medical, employment, alcohol, drug, psychological, legal, and family/social.
Change in Opioid use treatment continuation 4, 8, & 12 weeks postpartum Change in OAT continuation will be assessed via a direct question: "Are you currently receiving OAT (Y/N)? Please explain".
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Length of newborn hospital stay 4, 8, & 12 weeks postpartum Length of newborn hospital stay will be assessed via a direct question: "how many days did your newborn stay in the hospital"
maternal satisfaction with her birth experience 4, 8, & 12 weeks postpartum To assess maternal satisfaction with her birth, the Birth Satisfaction Scale-Revised (BSS-R) will be used. The BSS-R is a 10-item, Likert-type, birth satisfaction questionnaire that measures experiences of childbearing, stress, quality of care, and women's attributes, and was psychometrically validated in the US. Its response categories range from 1 = Strongly Disagree, to 5 = Strongly Agree, with higher scores indicating higher birth satisfaction.
Newborn readmission 4, 8, & 12 weeks postpartum Newborn hospital readmission will be assessed via direct questions at 3 time points: "has your newborn been readmitted to the hospital in the past 4 weeks for any reason? If yes, how many times in the past 4 weeks? Please list reasons for each readmission in the past 4 weeks"
maternal postpartum depression 4, 8, & 12 weeks postpartum Maternal postpartum depression will be assessed via the PHQ-9, a psychometrically validated 9-item measure used to assess depression in a variety of populations. The PHQ-9 asks participants to report on the degree they were bothered by 9 symptoms over the past 2 weeks (i.e., "little interest or pleasure in doing things", "feeling down, depressed, or hopeless"), with response categories ranging from 0=not at all, to 3= nearly every day, and higher scores indicating greater levels of depression symptomology.
maternal postpartum stress 4, 8, & 12 weeks postpartum Stress will be assessed via the Parenting Stress Index short form (PSI), which measures parental stress associated with the perception of having a difficult child or a dysfunctional parent-child relationship and consists of 36 items that are rated on a 5-point Likert scale (from 1-Strongly Agree to 5-Strongly Disagree) with higher scores indicative of less total stress. PSI has been shown to possess good psychometric properties and has been validated in numerous samples, including high-risk families. It includes Parental Distress, Parent-Child Dysfunctional Interaction and Difficult Child subscales, all of which will be considered individually. The Child and Parent domains can and will be combined to form a total stress scale score.
breastfeeding 4, 8, & 12 weeks postpartum Breastfeeding will be assessed via the following questions: "Are you currently breastfeeding? If yes, "How often do you breastfeed your baby?", if no, "How long did you breastfeed your baby"
maternal-infant bonding 4, 8, & 12 weeks postpartum Maternal-newborn bonding will be measured via the Maternal Postpartum Attachment Scale (MPAS.) It consists of 19 items assessing three dimensions: pleasure in interaction with the infant (5 items), absence of hostility towards the infant (5 items) and quality of mother-infant attachment (9 items). Response categories range from two-, three-, four- and five-point scales, for different items. The total score ranges from 19 to 95, with higher scores indicating higher maternal postpartum attachment to the baby. The MPAS has been found to have an acceptable level of reliability (Cronbach's alpha ranging from 0.75 to 0.79; test-retest reliability r= 0.86, p\<.001).
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Washington State University
🇺🇸Spokane, Washington, United States