4.1 Article

The Association of Moms2B, a Community-Based Interdisciplinary Intervention Program, and Pregnancy and Infant Outcomes among Women Residing in Neighborhoods with a High Rate of Infant Mortality

Journal

MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 923-932

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10995-020-03109-9

Keywords

Group prenatal care; Preterm birth; Infant mortality; Community-based intervention

Funding

  1. AMAG Pharmaceuticals
  2. Ohio State University Center for Clinical and Translational Science grant support (National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) [UL1TR002733]

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The study results indicated that participation in the Moms2B program leads to improved pregnancy and infant outcomes, particularly among non-Hispanic Black women with high-risk pregnancies.
Objectives We evaluated the effectiveness of Moms2B, a community-based group pregnancy and parenting program, in an effort to assess whether the program improved pregnancy and infant outcomes. Methods We conducted a retrospective matched exposure cohort study comparing women exposed to the Moms2B program during pregnancy (two or more prenatal visits) who delivered a singleton live birth or stillbirth (>= 20 weeks gestation) from 2011-2017 to a closely matched group of women not exposed to the program. Primary outcomes were preterm birth and low birth weight. Propensity score methods were used to provide strong control for confounders. Results The final analytic file comprised 675 exposed pregnancies and a propensity score-matched group of 1336 unexposed pregnancies. Most of the women were non-Hispanic Black. We found evidence of better outcomes among pregnancies exposed to Moms2B versus unexposed pregnancies, particularly for the primary outcome of low birth weight [9.45% versus 12.00%, respectively, risk difference (RD) = -2.55, 95% confidence interval (CI) = (-5.44, 0.34)]. Point estimates for all adverse pregnancy outcomes uniformly favored exposure to Moms2B. Conclusions for Practice Our findings suggest that participation in the Moms2B program improves pregnancy and infant outcomes. The program offers an innovative group model of pregnancy and parenting support for women, especially in non-Hispanic Black women with high-risk pregnancies.

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