He Korowai Manaaki: A Research Project of Pregnant Women to Test Whether Extra Free GP Appointments and a Way of Better Connecting Support Services Helps to Keep Mums and Babies Healthy.
He Korowai Manaaki Wairoa: A research project of pregnant women testing an augmented maternity care pathway to improve infant health outcomes.
Victoria University of Wellington
120 participants
Feb 27, 2018
Interventional
Conditions
Summary
Pregnant Maori women and their infants have poorer health outcomes compared to non-Maori. Ngati Pahauwera invited the Women’s Health Research Centre to partner with them to improve these outcomes. The resulting research study He Korowai Manaaki is a health service change adding extra support for pregnant women and support and education for practitioners, seeking to improve outcomes for pregnant women and their infants. Practice groups (GPs and midwives) in Wairoa will be supported and funded to provide best practice: an extended first maternity visit, a whanau needs assessment, navigation to midwife and other appropriate services, a follow-up visit, a third trimester GP visit and a 6week postnatal GP whanau visit. Free contraception and patient transport to appointments will also be provided. Posters in waiting rooms and pamphlets given to newly pregnant women in these practices will explain how their practice is involved in the He Korowai Manaaki study. Women can choose to attend appointments which they will be offered. He Korowai Manaaki aims to reduce infant admissions to hospital with otherwise avoidable conditions and improve timely vaccinations up to 1 year of age. Other potential improvements include improved birth outcomes, reductions in smoking, timely attendance to Well Child Tamariki Ora and increased registration with oral health services and Early Childhood Education (ECE) at 2 years of age. The outcomes will be obtained from the MOH who will provide the research team with encrypted de-identified information. Primary care practices will ask MOH to match NHIs of women and their infants to national databases for relevant health and non-health information. The de-identified encrypted outcome information for women and their infants taking part in He Korowai Manaaki will be compared with similar information for women and infants in Wairoa before the study began to see if it leads to better health.
Eligibility
Plain Language Summary
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Interventions
Participating in the study involves practice groups (midwifery group and general practice groups) being informed about the study and consenting to take part. GPs and midwives will be trained to carry out the augmented best practice maternity-care pathway to any pregnant woman seeking the provider’s care services during the study period through to the baby being aged 6 weeks. An advanced form (available through Med Tech) called Pregnancy Wraparound Care (PWC) has been designed to support the appointments with pregnant women and uploaded to the computer systems of the three primary care practices involved in the study. The same system was offered to the maternity service group and access could be made available through another server but they felt it would not be necessary to utilise this additional framework. To ensure both groups of providers were in a position to support referrals to allied services and be reminded about recommended best practice, the assessment prompts, health screening prompts, education resources, recall suggestions and connections for a wraparound service, a summary of the advanced form was shared with the maternity service as a PDF for reference. Midwives, GPs and practice nurses are offered the same shared training and education refreshers sessions which cover utilization of the advanced form. During the intervention period clinicians will provide added services for pregnant women. Additional to standard maternity care the pregnant woman in this intervention pathway will be offered: 1. First Touch extended antenatal appointment and Whanau focus needs assessment - face to face appointment with GP OR midwife - 30 to 40 minute appointment 2. Follow-up appointment to consider test results (ordered at First Touch) and follow on from discussions and referrals made from the Whanau focus needs assessment - face to face appointment with same practitioner that First Touch was undertaken by - 20 minute appointment 3. 3rd trimester GP visit - discussion of contraception planning, possible vaccination scheduling (flu and pertussis) if not received by this time, maternal wellness (including mental health) planning for delivery and infant care following the birth and General Practice care for the infant (midwife welcome to attend) - 20 to 30 minute appointment 4. 6-week postnatal GP visit - contraception delivery if not yet received and wanted by the woman, maternal wellness (including mental health) - 20 to 30 minute appointment First Touch is an extended first antenatal appointment which includes a whanau focus needs assessment covering oral health, transport, support, housing, finances, vaccinations and education. Identified issues will be addressed by connecting the woman and whanau to existing services and support through this pathway. The pregnant woman will be booked with a midwife at this appointment. At the Follow-Up appointment - undertaken by the same practitioner group that met the woman at First Touch, results from tests ordered at First Touch will be reviewed and discussed, and a follow-on conversation from discussions and referrals made from the Whanau focus needs assessment will take place - 20 minute appointment At the 3rd Trimester GP appointment (midwife may also attend) discussion points from First Touch will be revisited, condition of mum and baby updated and looking ahead, advice given about delivery and baby's first few weeks. Education and information about early childhood education (ECE), breastfeeding, immunisations, oral health, safe sleep and contraception requirements will also be shared and planned. Maternal vaccinations will be available. A further appointment to the GP will be arranged for when the baby is 6 weeks of age open to the mother, baby and whanau. This visit will include the baby's 6 week child checks plus discussion of maternal factors such as the planned contraception and any support or navigation required from the whanau focus in pregnancy. Any unmet needs will be documented by the GPs and midwives. Intervention adherence will not be assessed or collected by the individual practitioners - the individual care centre may audit this themselves if warranted
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ACTRN12618000071224