Reducing Racial Disparities in Maternal Care Through Data-Based Accountability and Doula Support
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Standard Care
- Conditions
- Pregnancy Related
- Sponsor
- University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
- Enrollment
- 60000
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- Odds of delivery of low-birthweight infants among non-Hispanic Black patients in each study arm
- Status
- Recruiting
- Last Updated
- 15 days ago
Overview
Brief Summary
This project-also known as "Accountability for Care through Undoing Racism & Equity for Moms" or ACURE4Moms-aims to reduce Black-White maternal health disparities using multi-level interventions designed to decrease bias in prenatal care, improve care coordination, and increase social support. ACURE4Moms is a pragmatic 4-arm cluster randomized controlled trial conducted with 39 prenatal practices across North Carolina. Practices have been randomly assigned to receive either: Arm 1 (Standard Care): North Carolina Medicaid Care management for high-risk pregnancies; Arm 2 (Data Accountability and Transparency): North Carolina Medicaid Care Management + Practice-level Data Accountability interventions; Arm 3 (Community-Based Doula Support): North Carolina Medicaid Care Management + Community-Based Doula support intervention for high-risk patients during pregnancy and postpartum; or Arm 4 (Data Accountability and Transparency + Community-Based Doula Support): North Carolina Medicaid Care Management + Both Arms 2 and 3 interventions. During each practice's 2-year intervention period, the practice will initiate prenatal care for ~750-1,500 patients (up to 60,000 patients total), whose outcomes the investigators will follow and compare between arms until all these patients have reached 1-year post-delivery.
Detailed Description
Pregnancy complications are increasing in the United States, and this is worse for Black patients, who are 3-4 times more likely to die from pregnancy than White patients. Pregnancy complications and deaths cause large physical, social, and financial burdens for patients and their families. Black patients who experience higher levels of institutional racism and discrimination from healthcare providers and institutions are more likely to have pregnancy complications, such as delivering a baby with low birthweight. Low birthweight (less than 5 pounds 9 ounces) is related to many short-term and long-term health problems for both baby and mother. The study, Accountability for Care through Undoing Racism and Equity for Moms (ACURE4Moms), aims to decrease pregnancy complications for all patients, but especially for Black patients, by decreasing institutional racism and bias in healthcare and improving community-based social support during pregnancy. The primary outcome will be to decrease low birthweight deliveries among Black women. The investigators will get information about low birthweight and other pregnancy outcomes from prenatal practice electronic healthcare records. A secondary outcome will be to decrease experiences with discrimination during prenatal care among Black patients; this information will be collected from an internet survey that will be completed at 4 time points between a patient's first prenatal visit and 3 months after delivery. To meet the study aims, the investigators will test 2 types of interventions. The first type (the "Data Accountability and Transparency interventions") will be focused on healthcare providers and their clinics. The study will improve accountability by setting up electronic Maternal Warning Systems to notify the clinics whenever a patient has a risk factor for low birthweight that needs to be treated or misses a scheduled appointment. Provider champions from each clinic will make sure the clinic acts on the warning. Secondly, the study will improve transparency by showing the clinics their pregnancy-related complication data for different racial groups every 3 months through a "Disparities Dashboard." This Dashboard will show the providers any differences in pregnancy complications for people of different races in their clinic and encourage them to come up with ways to improve the quality of their care to decrease those differences. The study will hire "Practice Facilitators" to help the clinics improve their workflows and communication with patients. Finally, all the staff at the clinics will undergo interactive racial equity training to help them recognize any implicit biases they have and understand how racism affects pregnancy care for patients of color. The second type of interventions will be focused on improving community-level support for high-risk pregnant patients. The study will do this by matching community-based doulas who are trained to provide culturally-relevant care with high-risk patients after their first prenatal appointment. The doulas will then provide support to these patients during pregnancy with up to 4 visits during the prenatal period, supporting them for up to 24 hours during labor, and performing 1-2 postpartum home visits. The doulas may provide additional services during pregnancy and labor, and through peer support groups lasting up to 1 year after birth (the "Community-Based Doula Support interventions"). To test how these each of these interventions improves low birthweight alone and when combined together, the study has enrolled 39 prenatal practices across North Carolina, into 1 of 4 randomized arms: 1) No interventions; 2) Data Accountability and Transparency interventions; 3) Community-Based Doula Support interventions; or 4) Both the Data Accountability and Transparency and Community-Based Doula Support interventions. The investigators predict that up to 60,000 patients will start prenatal care at one of the 39 practices during the study. For the patient surveys, the study plans to enroll patients who self-identify as Black or African American from each of the 39 practices, for a total of up to 4,400 survey participants. The investigators will also interview at least 250 practice staff, doulas, patients, and Practice Facilitators to understand how well the study interventions fit their needs. The study is led by a Stakeholder Advisory Board, which includes patients of color who have had a pregnancy complication, community doulas, practice representatives, health insurance payers, a patient advocacy group, healthcare organizations, and the North Carolina Department of Public Health. The majority of members will be people of color. The Board will meet every 3 months throughout the study to advise us about patient-centered outcomes, assist with dissemination of results, and advocate for related policy change.
Investigators
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Have at least 180 Black patient deliver over 2 years
- •Be willing to be randomized
- •Be willing to adhere to the study protocol
- •Patient survey participants:
- •Start prenatal care at one of the study clinics during study implementation
- •Self-identify as Black or African American
- •Able to give consent and complete surveys and interviews in English
- •Practice staff member participants:
- •Employed as either a provider, nurse/medical assistant, or office administrator at one of the clinics in this study
- •Doula participants:
Exclusion Criteria
- •Already integrated with Community-Based Doulas
- •Already have an Early Warning System or Disparities Dashboard
Arms & Interventions
Standard Care
Pregnant patients with Medicaid insurance are screened for risk factors for low birthweight, and high-risk patients receive intensive care management.
Data Accountability and Transparency
Pregnant patients with Medicaid insurance are screened for risk factors for low birthweight, and high-risk patients receive intensive care management. Additionally, practices receive 2 additional patient-level interventions, including: 1) Support from a Practice Facilitator to help implement the interventions and build workflows and quality improvement cycles; 2) Use of a Maternal Warning System for missed visits, elevated blood pressures, and prenatal aspirin eligibility; 3) Use of a Data Dashboard that displays outcome data stratified by race, ethnicity, age, and preferred language; and 4) Maternal Health Equity Education \& Training sessions.
Intervention: Data Accountability and Transparency
Community-Based Doula (CBD) Support
Pregnant patients with Medicaid insurance are screened for risk factors for low birthweight, and high-risk patients receive intensive care management. Additionally, practices receive 2 additional patient-level interventions, including: 1) Shared care of high-risk patients with Community-Based Doulas; and 2) Maternal Health Equity Education \& Training sessions.
Intervention: Community-Based Doula (CBD) Support
Data Accountability and Transparency + Community-Based Doula Support
Pregnant patients with Medicaid insurance are screened for risk factors for low birthweight, and high-risk patients receive intensive care management, and practices receive all the Data Accountability and Doula Interventions described in Arms 2 and 3.
Intervention: Data Accountability and Transparency
Data Accountability and Transparency + Community-Based Doula Support
Pregnant patients with Medicaid insurance are screened for risk factors for low birthweight, and high-risk patients receive intensive care management, and practices receive all the Data Accountability and Doula Interventions described in Arms 2 and 3.
Intervention: Community-Based Doula (CBD) Support
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Odds of delivery of low-birthweight infants among non-Hispanic Black patients in each study arm
Time Frame: Upon delivery
This Primary Outcome Measure will compare the odds of delivery of low-birthweight infants (less than 2,500 grams) among non-Hispanic Black patients in each study arm as listed in the maternal delivery summary and/or neonatal electronic health record data, with the primary comparison being between the Data Accountability and Transparency + Community-Based Doula Support arm and the Standard Care arm.
Secondary Outcomes
- Odds of any discrimination during prenatal care among Black patients in each study arm(24 weeks of gestation until delivery)
- Odds of incidence of depression during prenatal care among Black patients in each study arm(24 weeks of gestation until delivery)