Burduli Ekaterina, Jones Hendrée E, Brooks Olivia, Barbosa-Leiker Celestina, Johnson Ron Kim, Roll John, McPherson Sterling Marshall
College of Nursing, Washington State University, Spokane, WA, United States.
Analytics and PsychoPharmacology Laboratory, Washington State University, Spokane, WA, United States.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2021 Apr 15;10(4):e27382. doi: 10.2196/27382.
The United States continues to experience an alarming rise in opioid use that includes women who become pregnant and related neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) in newborns. Most newborns experiencing NAS require nonpharmacological care, which entails, most importantly, maternal involvement with the newborn. To facilitate positive maternal-newborn interactions, mothers need to learn effective caregiving NAS strategies when they are pregnant; however, an enormous gap exists in the early education of mothers on the symptoms and progression of NAS, partly because no education, training, or other interventions exist to prepare future mothers for the challenges of caring for their newborns at risk for NAS.
In this paper, we describe a mixed methods, multistage study to adapt an existing mobile NAS tool for high-risk pregnant women and assess its usability, acceptability, and feasibility in a small randomized controlled trial.
Stage 1 will include 20 semistructured interviews with a panel of neonatology experts, NAS care providers, and mothers with experience caring for NAS-affected newborns to gather their recommendations on the management of NAS and explore their perspectives on the care of these newborns. The findings will guide the adaptation of existing mobile NAS tools for high-risk pregnant women. In stage 2, we will test the usability, acceptability, and feasibility of the adapted mobile tool via surveys with 10 pregnant women receiving opioid agonist therapy (OAT). Finally, in stage 3, we will randomize 30 high-risk pregnant women receiving OAT to either receive the adapted mobile NAS caregiving tool or usual care. We will compare these women on primary outcomes-maternal drug relapse and OAT continuation-and secondary outcomes-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.
This project was funded in July 2020 and approved by the institutional review board in April 2020. Data collection for stage 1 began in December 2020, and as of January 2021, we completed 18 semistructured interviews (10 with NAS providers and 8 with perinatal women receiving OAT). Common themes from all interviews will be analyzed in spring 2021 to inform the adaptation of the NAS caregiving tool. The results from stage 1 are expected to be published in summer 2021. Stage 2 data collection will commence in fall 2021.
The findings of this study have the potential to improve NAS care and maternal-newborn outcomes and lead to commercialized product development. If effective, our new tool will be well suited to tailoring for other high-risk perinatal women with substance use disorders.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04783558; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04783558.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/27382.
美国阿片类药物的使用持续惊人地增加,其中包括怀孕女性,以及由此导致的新生儿戒断综合征(NAS)。大多数患有NAS的新生儿需要非药物治疗,其中最重要的是母亲参与对新生儿的护理。为了促进母婴之间积极的互动,母亲们需要在孕期学习有效的护理NAS的策略;然而,在对母亲进行NAS症状和进展的早期教育方面存在巨大差距,部分原因是不存在任何教育、培训或其他干预措施,让未来的母亲为照顾有NAS风险的新生儿所面临的挑战做好准备。
在本文中,我们描述了一项混合方法的多阶段研究,旨在为高危孕妇改编现有的移动NAS工具,并在一项小型随机对照试验中评估其可用性、可接受性和可行性。
第一阶段将包括对一组新生儿专家、NAS护理提供者以及有照顾受NAS影响新生儿经验的母亲进行20次半结构化访谈,以收集他们对NAS管理的建议,并探讨他们对这些新生儿护理的看法。研究结果将指导为高危孕妇改编现有的移动NAS工具。在第二阶段,我们将通过对10名接受阿片类激动剂治疗(OAT)的孕妇进行调查,测试改编后的移动工具的可用性、可接受性和可行性。最后,在第三阶段,我们将把30名接受OAT的高危孕妇随机分为两组,一组接受改编后的移动NAS护理工具,另一组接受常规护理。我们将比较这些女性在主要结局(母亲药物复发和OAT持续使用情况)以及次要结局(母婴联结;新生儿住院时间;再入院率;母乳喂养开始情况和持续时间;以及产后4周、8周和12周时的产后抑郁和焦虑)方面的差异。
该项目于2020年7月获得资助,并于2020年4月获得机构审查委员会的批准。第一阶段的数据收集于2020年12月开始,截至2021年1月,我们完成了18次半结构化访谈(10次访谈NAS提供者,8次访谈接受OAT的围产期女性)。2021年春季将分析所有访谈中的共同主题,以为NAS护理工具的改编提供参考。预计第一阶段的结果将于2021年夏季发表。第二阶段的数据收集将于2021年秋季开始。
本研究的结果有可能改善NAS护理和母婴结局,并推动商业化产品的开发。如果有效,我们的新工具将非常适合为其他患有物质使用障碍的高危围产期女性量身定制。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04783558;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04783558。
国际注册报告识别码(IRRID):DERR1-10.2196/27382。