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BOOST: Breastfeeding Onset and Onward With Support Tools

Not Applicable
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Breastfeeding Duration
Interventions
Behavioral: WIC support + home-based individual support + Breastfeeding Incentives (SC+BFI)
Behavioral: WIC support + home-based individual support (SC)
Registration Number
NCT03964454
Lead Sponsor
RTI International
Brief Summary

This behavioral intervention trial will test whether a standard care breastfeeding intervention from the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program plus monthly financial incentives contingent on observed breastfeeding will improve breastfeeding duration among low-income mothers compared to a standard (WIC) care control. Investigators hypothesize that the standard care plus monthly contingent financial incentives intervention will promote longer breastfeeding duration, fewer infant health issues, and greater healthcare cost savings than the standard care (control) intervention.

Detailed Description

Low-income racial/ethnic-minority women have greater challenges with breastfeeding uptake and duration than the general population, resulting in an average breastfeeding duration of four months. This duration is substantially shorter than evidence-based recommendations by the American Academy of Pediatrics to exclusively breastfeed for six months in addition to continued breastfeeding through the first year. Insufficient duration of any breastfeeding is related to multiple maternal and child health problems and increases in breastfeeding duration could be cost saving medically and societally.

Even though breastfeeding counseling and peer support have been effective in prolonging breastfeeding duration in the general maternal population, the effect has not been as strong for WIC-eligible (Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC)), low-income mothers. Examining novel adjunctive intervention components that could enhance standard WIC counseling and support is warranted. We tested an incentive-based intervention among low-income Puerto Rican mothers in a pilot study. Results suggested strong potential for efficacy of monthly financial incentives contingent on observed breastfeeding for 6 months combined with WIC usual care, compared to WIC usual care only.

The current, full-scale randomized trial will test the efficacy and generalizability of the 6-month incentive-based approach to increase breastfeeding duration in WIC-eligible mothers through 12 months. The aims of the study are guided by the mission of NICHD's Pregnancy and Perinatology Branch to improve the long-term maternal and infant health of low-income populations via encouraging breastfeeding in the translational research context.

This study is a 2-group, multi-site, parallel randomized controlled trial. The study will be conducted in two regional sites with high concentrations of low-income racial/ethnic minority mothers, Philadelphia, PA and Newark, DE. Participants (n=168) include WIC-eligible mothers who will be allocated into one of the two study groups: (1) A Standard Care Control (SC) group consisting of breastfeeding support through WIC, with home-based individual support, or (2) Standard Care plus Incentives contingent on demonstrating successful breastfeeding (SC+BFI).

Participants randomized into SC will receive standard breastfeeding services from WIC plus monthly home visits that facilitate navigation to as-needed resources and referrals to services that support breastfeeding and problem solving. Participants randomized into SC+BFI will receive the same WIC services and monthly home visits as the SC group, with addition of financial incentives following each home visit that are contingent on observed breastfeeding.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
168
Inclusion Criteria
  • mothers must initiate breastfeeding
  • mothers must be WIC-enrolled or eligible to enroll in WIC services
  • mothers must reside and plan to stay in the study county for 12 months postpartum
  • mothers must consent voluntarily
  • mothers must understand fifth grade level of English
  • mothers must be at least 18 years old
Exclusion Criteria
  • mothers whose babies are medically contraindicated against breastfeeding
  • mothers who are hospitalized for severe postpartum medical issues
  • mothers who have ongoing illicit drug use issues
  • mothers who had a psychiatric hospitalization within the last three months
  • mothers who currently have suicidal thoughts or attempts

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
SC + BFIWIC support + home-based individual support + Breastfeeding Incentives (SC+BFI)Participants randomized into SC+BFI will receive the same services as the Standard Care Control (SC) group (standard breastfeeding services from Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) plus monthly home visits that facilitate navigation to as-needed resources and referrals to services that support breastfeeding and problem solving) plus financial incentives contingent on observed breastfeeding.
SCWIC support + home-based individual support (SC)Participants randomized into Standard Care (SC) will receive standard breastfeeding services from Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) plus monthly home visits that facilitate navigation to as-needed resources and referrals to services that support breastfeeding and problem solving.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of Participants Breastfeeding Their Infants at 1 Month1 month

Identify breastfeeding behavior via standardized observational method: Identifying audible swallowing, regular suck/swallow/breathe pattern, or visible milk in the infant's mouth.

Number of Participants Breastfeeding Their Infants at 3 Months3 months

Identify breastfeeding behavior via standardized observational method: Identifying audible swallowing, regular suck/swallow/breathe pattern, or visible milk in the infant's mouth.

Number of Participants Breastfeeding Their Infants at 6 Months6 months

Identify breastfeeding behavior via standardized observational method: Identifying audible swallowing, regular suck/swallow/breathe pattern, or visible milk in the infant's mouth.

Number of Participants Breastfeeding Their Infants at 9 Months9 months

Identify breastfeeding behavior via standardized observational method: Identifying audible swallowing, regular suck/swallow/breathe pattern, or visible milk in the infant's mouth.

Number of Participants Breastfeeding Their Infants at 12 Months12 months

Identify breastfeeding behavior via standardized observational method: Identifying audible swallowing, regular suck/swallow/breathe pattern, or visible milk in the infant's mouth.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Infant Weight1 month

Measured with a portable digital infant scale.

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

Temple University

🇺🇸

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Christiana Care Health Services, Inc.

🇺🇸

Newark, Delaware, United States

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