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PROJECT 2: PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
Most preventable maternal deaths occur in the intrapartum and immediate postpartum (PP) periods, as do
complications from undetected/undertreated mental health (MH) conditions (e.g., suicide, overdose) and
cardiovascular (CV) events. In New York City (NYC), maternal deaths are 8–12 times higher for Black than for
White birthing parents. However, most community-based programs addressing the health of birthing individuals
in this population have been narrowly focused on basic services (e.g., breastfeeding, social support), with limited
focus on evidence-based care. Holistic interventions addressing physical, mental, and social health needs in the
critical PP transition and moving from trauma- and “risk”-based to a strength- and empowerment-based approach
are urgently needed. Many hospital, community, and governmental barriers preclude broad adoption and scaling
of doula-delivered care, and it is not known how facilitators, assets, and resources can improve care continuity
and community-hospital linkages to support birthing individuals at diverse sites across NYC. The impact of doula-
led interventions at patient- and health-system levels have yet to be rigorously evaluated. In collaboration with
the Caribbean Women's Health Association and the Northern Manhattan Perinatal Partnership, we will address
these gaps by implementing and evaluating Living Healthy for Moms (LHMoms) in three complementary settings
and populations (Brooklyn, Queens, and Northern Manhattan). LHMoms is a novel integrated care intervention
that focuses intensively on care continuity and community-to-healthcare linkages that starts prior to discharge
and during the first 7 days post-discharge (PD) and extends into six months post-partum, as critical windows to
prevent long-term physical and mental health sequelae, while also addressing key determinants of lifelong health
risk. We have developed several innovative, evidence-based interventions, including an online education
empowerment program (using a Patient Activated Learning System platform we developed) to build patient self-
advocacy beginning in-hospital; a doula-led health emergency detection program during the critical first 7 days
PD; and a trauma-informed doula-delivered cognitive behavioral phone intervention to address PP depression
and cardiovascular risks for the critical six months following delivery. We propose a rigorous, mixed-methods
study of LHMoms to address three specific aims. In Aim 1, we will test the effectiveness of LHMoms vs. attention
control in a Hybrid Type 1 Implementation Trial with 450 randomized birthing individuals at three hospital sites
in Brooklyn, Queens, and Northern Manhattan. This will include refining and tailoring the intervention to each
site to maximize care quality, building capacity for doulas to deliver LHMoms, and assessing effectiveness in
lowering PP depression, improving CV health, and creating better quality of life. In Aim 2, we will analyze the
effects of LHMoms on PP healthcare utilization and satisfaction. In Aim 3, we will examine the implementation
process and outcomes of the LHMoms intervention at the three sites. This project will advance the overall goals
of NY-CHAMP to optimize PP outcomes for historically disadvantaged birthing individuals.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 7/1/23 → 6/30/24 |
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
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Projects
- 1 Finished
-
NY Community-Hospital-Academic Maternal Health Equity Partnerships (NY-CHAMP)
Reddy, U. U. (PI), Rodriguez, E. E. (CoPI), Li, G. G. (CoPI), Taylor, J. J. Y. (CoPI), Hall, K. K. S. (CoPI), Osborne, L. L. M. (CoPI), Dorval-moller, M. M. (CoPI), Safford, M. M. M. (CoPI), Brown, S. S. (CoPI) & St. Clair, V. V. (CoPI)
8/17/23 → 7/31/24
Project: Research project