4.5 Article

Study protocol for reducing disparity in receipt of mother's own milk in very low birth weight infants (ReDiMOM): a randomized trial to improve adherence to sustained maternal breast pump use

Journal

BMC PEDIATRICS
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12887-021-03088-y

Keywords

Very low birth weight; Very preterm; Neonatal intensive care unit; Mother's own milk; Maternal breast milk; Economic evaluation; Cost-effectiveness analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities of the National Institutes of Health [R01MD013969]

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This study aims to test the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an intervention that offsets the costs of pumping breast milk for Black very low birth weight and very preterm infants, in order to increase the likelihood of receiving mother's own milk at the time of discharge.
Background: Black very low birth weight (VLBW; <1500g birth weight) and very preterm (VP, <32weeks gestational age, inclusive of extremely preterm, <28 weeks gestational age) infants are significantly less likely than other VLBW and VP infants to receive mother's own milk (MOM) through to discharge from the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). The costs associated with adhering to pumping maternal breast milk are borne by mothers and contribute to this disparity. This randomized controlled trial tests the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an intervention to offset maternal costs associated with pumping. Methods: This randomized control trial will enroll 284 mothers and their VP infants to test an intervention (NICU acquires MOM) developed to facilitate maternal adherence to breast pump use by offsetting maternal costs that serve as barriers to sustaining MOM feedings and the receipt of MOM at NICU discharge. Compared to current standard of care (mother provides MOM), the intervention bundle includes three components: a) free hospital-grade electric breast pump, b) pickup of MOM, and c) payment for opportunity costs. The primary outcome is infant receipt of MOM at the time of NICU discharge, and secondary outcomes include infant receipt of any MOM during the NICU hospitalization, duration of MOM feedings (days), and cumulative dose of MOM feedings (total mL/kg of MOM) received by the infant during the NICU hospitalization; maternal duration of MOM pumping (days) and volume of MOM pumped (mLs); and total cost of NICU care. Additionally, we will compare the cost of the NICU acquiring MOM versus NICU acquiring donor human milk if MOM is not available and the cost-effectiveness of the intervention (NICU acquires MOM) versus standard of care (mother provides MOM). Discussion: This trial will determine the effectiveness of an economic intervention that transfers the costs of feeding VLBWand VP infants from mothers to the NICU to address the disparity in the receipt of MOM feedings at NICU discharge by Black infants. The cost-effectiveness analysis will provide data that inform the adoption and scalability of this intervention.

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