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Completed NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Early Intervention to Promote Cardiovascular Health of Mothers and Children in Northern Appalachia

$6.64M USD

Funder NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization Pennsylvania State University Hershey Med Ctr
Country United States
Start Date May 05, 2022
End Date Apr 30, 2024
Duration 726 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10426872
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT As part of NHLBI’s ENRICH program, this research will test an implementation-ready intervention designed to improve cardiovascular health (CVH) among high risk mothers and young children during pregnancy and the first two years after delivery. Home visitation (HV) models meeting federal criteria of evidence of effectiveness

will be leveraged to compare existing HV programs against those with an additional CVH intervention in a cluster-randomized, multicenter trial. Our multidisciplinary team has pioneered behavioral and lifestyle interventions for women during preconception and pregnancy and for infants during the first years after birth including those using HV for the

primary prevention of obesity. We also have extensive research experience linking and integrating community- based healthcare programs with health system electronic medical records (EMRs). For this proposal, we will collaborate with two Nurse-Family Partnership agencies in Northern Appalachia, a medically underserved

region with high rates of poverty and poor CVH, including high rates of obesity, heart disease, and tobacco use. We will enroll ≥500 of the 3000 pregnant women required for the UH3 phase multicenter trial. During the UG3 phase, we will pilot our proposed intervention with our community partners and work

collaboratively with other ENRICH sites and NHLBI to develop the UH3 phase common protocol. Our proposed intervention incorporates tenets of Social Cognitive Theory and the Framework for Understanding Poverty using a skill-building curriculum that includes role modeling, goal-setting, and skill practice opportunities in the

home. Five intervention pillars (Lifestyle Behaviors, Self-Regulation, Responsive Parenting, Home Environment, EMR Integration) are designed to increase maternal knowledge and self-efficacy in their ability to establish healthy lifestyle habits and maternal parenting practices to improve CVH. Consistent with a Hybrid

Trial Type 1, the study design aims to understand the context for implementing the intervention. The composite primary outcome for mothers will be a modified version of the American Heart Association’s Life’s Simple 7 one year after childbirth; outcomes will also be assessed 2-years postpartum. The childhood primary outcome will

be a composite of seven early life risk factors for poor CVH across with the final assessment at age 2-years. For these outcomes, the moderating effects of social determinants of health and psychosocial indices on outcomes will be explored. In addition, the context for implementation will be evaluated and factors influencing

intervention efficacy will be identified to determine in HV, what works best, for whom, in which contexts, why and how. Lastly, we aim to lead network efforts to link and integrate HV summaries into EMRs to allow for data sharing with healthcare providers to enhance intervention effectiveness so that the UH3 protocol can evaluate

whether EMR integration with HV programs improves CVH composite indicators as well as health equity.

All Grantees

Pennsylvania State University Hershey Med Ctr

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