Byatt Nancy, Zimmermann Martha, Lightbourne Taber C, Sankaran Padma, Haider Uruj K, Sheldrick Radley Christopher, Eliasziw Misha, Moore Simas Tiffany A
Departments of Psychiatry, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Quantitative Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Shrewsbury, MA (Byatt); Department of Psychiatry, UMass Memorial Health, Shrewsbury, MA (Byatt).
Department of Psychiatry, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Shrewsbury, MA (Zimmermann, Sankaran, and Sheldrick).
Am J Obstet Gynecol MFM. 2025 Feb;7(2):101599. doi: 10.1016/j.ajogmf.2024.101599. Epub 2025 Jan 3.
Mood and anxiety disorders affect one in 5 perinatal individuals and are undertreated. While professional organizations and policy makers recommend that obstetric practices screen for, assess and treat mood and anxiety disorders, multi-level barriers to doing so exist. To help obstetric practices implement the recommended standard of care, we developed implementation assistance, an approach to guide practices on how to integrate screening, assessment, and treatment of mood and anxiety disorders into the obstetric practice workflow. To teach obstetric care clinicians how to treat perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, we also developed an e-learning course and toolkit.
Evaluate the extent to which 1) implementation assistance + e-learning/toolkit, and 2) e-learning/toolkit alone improved the rates and quality of care for perinatal mood and anxiety disorders in obstetric practices, as compared to usual care.
We conducted a cluster randomized controlled trial involving 13 obstetric practices across the United States (US). Using 2:2:1 randomization, 13 obstetric practices were assigned to 1) implementation assistance + e-learning/toolkit (n=5), 2) e-learning/toolkit alone (n=5), or 3) usual care (n=3). We measured obstetric care clinicians' quality of care for perinatal mood and anxiety disorders (as measured by medical record documentation of screening, assessment, treatment initiation, and monitoring) documented in patient charts (n=1040). Effectiveness was assessed using multilevel generalized linear mixed models, accounting for clustering of repeated measurements (n=2, i.e., pre and post) within obstetric care clinicians' patient charts (n=40) nested within practices (n=13). Intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses were conducted.
At baseline, no significant differences were observed among the 3 groups regarding documented mental health screening. Chart abstraction at 8 months post-training revealed a significant increase in recommended bipolar disorder screening only among the practices that received the implementation plus e-learning/toolkit (from 0.0% to 30.0%; p=.017). Practices receiving the e-learning/toolkit alone or usual care continued to not screen for bipolar disorder. Documented screening for anxiety also increased in the implementation + e-learning/toolkit group (from 0.5% to 40.2%), however, it did not reach statistical significance when compared to the other groups (P=.09). A significant increase in documented post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) screening was observed among practices receiving the implementation plus e-learning/toolkit (0.0% to 30.0%; P=.018). The quality-of-care score in the implementation + e-learning toolkit group increased from 20.5 at baseline to 42.8 at follow-up and was significantly different from both the e-learning/toolkit alone group (P=.02) and the usual care group (P=.03). At 8 months post-training, the implementation + e-learning/toolkit group had higher mean provider readiness scores than the other 2 groups for documentation of screening, assessment, and monitoring. However, documentation of treatment was the only component that reached statistical significance (P=.025).
Among the practices that followed the implementation protocols, implementation assistance + e-learning/toolkit was effective in improving rates of screening for bipolar disorder, anxiety, and PTSD. However, 3 of the 5 practices did not follow the implementation protocols, suggesting that the intensity of the implementation needs to be tailored based on practice readiness for implementation.
情绪和焦虑障碍影响着五分之一的围产期人群,且治疗不足。尽管专业组织和政策制定者建议产科机构对情绪和焦虑障碍进行筛查、评估和治疗,但这样做存在多层次障碍。为帮助产科机构实施推荐的护理标准,我们开发了实施援助,这是一种指导机构如何将情绪和焦虑障碍的筛查、评估及治疗融入产科工作流程的方法。为教授产科护理临床医生如何治疗围产期情绪和焦虑障碍,我们还开发了一门电子学习课程和工具包。
评估1)实施援助 + 电子学习/工具包,以及2)单独的电子学习/工具包与常规护理相比,在多大程度上提高了产科机构对围产期情绪和焦虑障碍的护理率及护理质量。
我们在美国进行了一项整群随机对照试验,涉及13个产科机构。采用2:2:1随机分组,将13个产科机构分为1)实施援助 + 电子学习/工具包(n = 5),2)单独的电子学习/工具包(n = 5),或3)常规护理(n = 3)。我们测量了产科护理临床医生对围产期情绪和焦虑障碍的护理质量(通过患者病历中筛查、评估、治疗启动和监测的病历记录来衡量)(n = 1040)。使用多层次广义线性混合模型评估有效性,考虑产科护理临床医生患者病历(n = 40)中重复测量(n = 2,即前后)在机构(n = 13)内的聚类情况。进行了意向性分析和符合方案分析。
在基线时,三组在记录的心理健康筛查方面未观察到显著差异。培训后8个月的病历摘要显示,仅在接受实施援助加电子学习/工具包的机构中,推荐的双相情感障碍筛查有显著增加(从0.0%增至30.0%;p = 0.017)。仅接受电子学习/工具包或常规护理的机构继续未对双相情感障碍进行筛查。实施援助 + 电子学习/工具包组中记录的焦虑筛查也有所增加(从0.5%增至40.2%),然而,与其他组相比未达到统计学显著性(P = 0.09)。在接受实施援助加电子学习/工具包的机构中,观察到记录的创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)筛查有显著增加(从0.0%增至30.0%;P = 0.018)。实施援助 + 电子学习工具包组的护理质量评分从基线时的20.5增至随访时的42.8,与单独的电子学习/工具包组(P = 0.02)和常规护理组(P = 0.03)均有显著差异。培训后8个月,实施援助 + 电子学习/工具包组在筛查、评估和监测记录方面的平均提供者准备度得分高于其他两组。然而,治疗记录是唯一达到统计学显著性的组成部分(P = 0.025)。
在遵循实施方案的机构中,实施援助 + 电子学习/工具包在提高双相情感障碍、焦虑和PTSD的筛查率方面有效。然而,5个机构中有3个未遵循实施方案,这表明实施强度需要根据机构的实施准备情况进行调整。