NL-OMON55894
Recruiting
N/A
Collaborating to improve neonatale care: Parental participation on the neonatal ward - the neoPartner study - The neoPARTNER study
OLVG0 sites1,800 target enrollmentTBD
Overview
- Phase
- N/A
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- neonatal care
- Sponsor
- OLVG
- Enrollment
- 1800
- Status
- Recruiting
- Last Updated
- 2 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
No summary available.
Investigators
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •\- infant requiring hospital admission directly (within 24 hours) after birth
- •\- parents of 18 years or older
Exclusion Criteria
- •\- Infant\*s hospital stay shorter than 7 days;
- •\- Infant with severe congenital or syndromal anomaly;
- •\- Infant with critical illness who is unlikely to survive;
- •\- Parent with current psychosocial problems (such as posttraumatic stress
- •disorder, schizophrenia or psychotic disorders) with or without medication
- •which have not been stable over the past year;
- •\- Involvement of child protective services in the family;
- •\- Parent not able or not willing to fill out questionnaires in English or
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Not specified
Similar Trials
Completed
N/A
Improving essential maternal and newborn care in poor rural communities in MalawiMaternal, neonatal and child healthPregnancy and ChildbirthISRCTN06477126niversity College London (UK)17,280
Not Yet Recruiting
N/A
Saving newborn and maternal lives in IndiaCTRI/2023/04/052064Swedish Research Council
Not Yet Recruiting
N/A
The COllaborative Neonatal NEtwork for the first CPAM Trial, the CONNECTCongenital lung abnormalitylung abnormality10038686NL-OMON51712Erasmus MC, Universitair Medisch Centrum Rotterdam70
Completed
N/A
Improving maternal and newborn health through participatory community groups in three rural districts in BangladeshMaternal and child healthPregnancy and ChildbirthISRCTN54792066niversity College London (UCL) Institute of Child Health (UK)2,000
Completed
N/A
Improving newborn care and outcomes through training of traditional birth attendants in use of bag and mask resuscitation in three rural districts in BangladeshISRCTN19619148niversity College London (UCL) Institute of Child Health (UK)20,000