The purpose of the study is to culturally adapt and examine the feasibility of a group prenatal program (Kōmmour Prenatal) to reduce maternal and infant health disparities among Marshallese Pacific Islander women in the US. The study will also gather information from providers of Kōmmour Prenatal and stakeholders in the Marshallese community familiar with the program to learn of their experience with the program.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
38
Centering Pregnancy, a group prenatal care model, is a promising intervention that challenges the standard model of one-on-one counseling of prenatal care. The model, is currently implemented at the UAMS, but as of yet to be adapted for Pacific Islanders. Centering Pregnancy replaces the individual prenatal care visit with a group model for obstetrically low-risk women. This model provides substantially more health promotion content than the traditional one-on-one prenatal care model. The intervention occurs from week 14 of pregnancy through birth, following the same same schedule as individual care. Group visits are 90-120 minutes each and follow a unique structured curriculum that incorporates standards of care. In the group setting, credentialed prenatal providers conduct a one-on-one assessment with each patient (30 min) and then facilitate group discussions on the topics of pregnancy, using adult learning principles (60-90 min).
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Northwest
Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States
Gestational Weight Gain
Gestational weight gain will be measured by weight of first and last group prenatal visit along with information from the birth record data. We will use independent samples tests for proportions to compare treatment groups. We will also use generalized linear models to examine treatment group differences including important covariates such as income, education, age and marital status. Further, data from the proposed study will be use the data from the Kommour treatment group to estimate intraclass correlations as an indicator of clustering due to the nesting of participants within groups.
Time frame: 9 months
Breastfeeding initiation, birth weight of infant, preeclampsia, primary cesarean birth, and gestational diabetes mellitus
The research team will abstract medical record information about the mother and child.
Time frame: 9 months
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.