Sepsis is the second leading cause of maternal death in the U.S. For racial and ethnic minoritized birthing people, especially those who are Black, living in poverty, and from underserved communities, labor and postpartum are particularly vulnerable risk periods. The goal of this multi-center, multidisciplinary observational study is to establish a novel maternal care continuity model to reduce sepsis- related death and disability and increase maternal health equity.
Maternal sepsis is the second leading cause of maternal death, major cause of morbidity, and preventable in most cases. Labor, birth, and postpartum are periods of increased sepsis risk, particularly for racial and ethnic minoritized birthing people. With extensive community partnerships and community organized leadership advisory board (CoLAB), EnCoRe MoMS: Engaging Communities to Reduce Morbidity from Maternal Sepsis (Aim 3) Conduct a co-design process and qualitative study to explore the experiences, needs, and perceived solutions for maternal care continuity, sepsis prevention, and promotion of equity in postpartum. In the UG3 phase, robust community engagement and research infrastructures were established to: 3a. (3a.1) Refine the CoLAB and co-design process; (3a.2) Conduct in-depth individual patient interviews (IDIs) and focus group discussions (FGDs) with community and hospital stakeholders from one site to explore the lived experiences and perspectives of SDOH on care access/quality, outcome disparities, and solutions for care continuity. In the UH3 phase, the investigators will engage the community toAim 3b. (3b.1) Complete qualitative patient IDIs and stakeholder FGDs for the three additional hospital sites; (3b.2) Co-design an integrative supportive care model, with our community partner co-lead, CoLAB, and results from other aims, that entails maternal sepsis community engagement, care linkages, education, services, and policy efforts. The resulting model can be scaled to hospitals and communities with lesser resources and applied to other preventable causes of severe maternal morbidity.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
200
Columbia Unviersity Medical Center
New York, New York, United States
NYC Health+Hospitals/Harlem
New York, New York, United States
NYC Health + Hospitals/Lincoln
The Bronx, New York, United States
Integrative Supportive Care Model
Patient and community stakeholder feedback regarding lived experiences and perspectives of the impact of SDOH on care access and quality will be assessed by questionnaire.
Time frame: 2023-2025
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