NOURISH - A Healthcare-community Partnership to Improve Nutrition for Optimal Glycemic Control and Pregnancy Outcomes With Pregestational Diabetes
Ohio State University
174 participants
Jun 1, 2025
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Nutrition insecurity (inclusive of food insecurity + poor diet quality) is a fundamental social need that must be addressed to improve treatment and health outcomes for high-risk pregnant women with pregestational type 1 and 2 diabetes, poor glucose control, and food insecurity for whom a healthy diet is critical. The NOURISH trial will provide evidence of a scalable, integrated, and theory-based healthcare-community partnership that includes weekly nutritious produce home delivery, monthly clinic-integrated diabetes, nutrition, and culinary group education, and continuous social needs assessment and support to improve glucose control and pregnancy outcomes. Given the increasing burden and devasting consequences of nutrition insecurity among high-risk pregnant women with diabetes and unmet social needs, NOURISH-an innovative and sustainable healthcare-community partnership-will have significant public health benefit.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria10
- Pregnant with singleton or twin pregnancy
- Gestational age >8+0 to ≤22+6 weeks at enrollment by project EDD
- Age ≥ 18 years.
- Type 1 or 2 diabetes.
- Screen positive for food insecurity based on answering "Often" or "Sometimes" true to either of the two questions on the USDA Hunger Vital Sign screening questions (within 12 months of enrolling in prenatal care).
- English or Spanish speaking.
- Willing to participate in Mid-Ohio Farmacy program and able to provide a home address to which food delivery can be provided by the Mid-Ohio Food Collective.
- Hemoglobin A1c criteria:
- If not taking glucagon-line peptide-1 (GLP-1) or sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) medication within 12 months of enrolling in prenatal care, A1c ≥6.5% during this time period.
- If taking GLP-1 or SGLT2 medication within 12 months of enrolling in prenatal care, A1c≥6.5% during the 12 months prior to initiation of these medications.
Exclusion Criteria2
- Involuntarily confined or detained.
- Considered as having a diminished decision-making capacity.
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Interventions
The Mid-Ohio Food Collective (MOFC) is a regional foodbank that delivers \>170,000 meals daily through 680 agency partnerships and is ranked as one of the 10 largest in the U.S. Both OSUWMC and MOFC are located in a large metropolitan region in Ohio. OSUWMC offers the Mid-Ohio Farmacy (MOF) referral in nine clinics, including an integrated diabetes and prenatal care clinic for pregnant individuals with pregestational diabetes, with OSUWMC funding secured to continue this program. The goal of the MOF is to establish a systematic screening and referral process aimed at addressing food insecurity that connects patients to fresh produce through a food pantry near their home. In NOURISH: The investigators will extend the existing MOF program to weekly home delivery of produce coordinated by the Food Collective. Weekly MOF+ deliveries will include 15 to 20 pounds per week of low to medium glycemic index fruits and vegetables from available inventory, as recommended by the USDA.
The investigators will deploy OSU Extension's community-based education program, DWD, with live programming focused on cooking instruction from the OSU-based Cooking Matters (CM) program, which actively engages participants to develop skills for healthy eating. Working with our diabetes education team from DWD, the investigators have tailored this program to target the specific needs of pregnant individuals with pregestational diabetes. This includes in-person 1 hour group sessions every 4 weeks (monthly) at the time of clinic visits with alternating education sessions provided by DWD with interactive hands-on cooking sessions provided by CM. The nutrition portion focuses on healthy eating and blood glucose management, and the cooking portion provides education on food safety, knife techniques, nutrition facts and ingredients label reading, meal planning, budgeting, and shopping. Content will be adapted from state-approved curricula for pregnancy and the American Diabetes Association.
Health Impact Ohio Central Ohio Pathways Hub. The Pathways Community Hub ('Hub') model consists of three features: (1) the Hub is a regional coordination entity that employs CHWs to assess the medical and social needs of vulnerable patients and connect them to community resources; (2) the CHWs initiate a "care pathway," a defined action plan that describes how patient needs will be addressed, which is then recorded and tracked in an electronic database; and (3) completion of each care pathway is linked to payment from insurance companies (Medicaid-managed care plans and other community partners) based on specific performance benchmarks. Specifically, a financial contract is attached to each standardized care pathway: When a care pathway is completed, a CHW must confirm that a measurable outcome (e.g., patient is assigned to a medical home) is obtained in order to receive an insurance payment.
Locations(1)
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NCT07560813