Mitigating Hunger and Food Insecurity Among Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Caregivers of Hospitalized Children
NCT ID: NCT02700802
Last Updated: 2017-05-12
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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WITHDRAWN
NA
INTERVENTIONAL
2017-07-31
2022-08-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
OTHER
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Feed1st: Face-to-face provider delivered referral
In this arm of the study, caregivers will receive usual care and a brief face-to-face referral to the Feed1st program delivered by the provider.
Feed1st
Feed1st is a unique hospital-based hunger mitigation program that, since 2010, has operated low-cost, self-serve food pantries at Comer Children's Hospital. All parents and caregivers with a hospitalized child have 24/7 free access to these self-serve pantries with the option to eat food in the pantry, carry out as much food as needed, and contribute back to the pantry with food, volunteerism, or other resources. The program also offers free phone/text/email navigation for food support and other basic needs resources. We aim to conduct a 3-arm, randomized comparative effectiveness study to evaluate the impact, versus usual care, of two alternative referral strategies to increase Feed1st program utilization and impact.
Feed1st: Text message delivered referral
In this arm of the study, caregivers will receive usual care and an automated brief text message referral to the Feed1st program from the health care provider. The text message referral will align as closely as possible with the face-to-face referral.
Feed1st
Feed1st is a unique hospital-based hunger mitigation program that, since 2010, has operated low-cost, self-serve food pantries at Comer Children's Hospital. All parents and caregivers with a hospitalized child have 24/7 free access to these self-serve pantries with the option to eat food in the pantry, carry out as much food as needed, and contribute back to the pantry with food, volunteerism, or other resources. The program also offers free phone/text/email navigation for food support and other basic needs resources. We aim to conduct a 3-arm, randomized comparative effectiveness study to evaluate the impact, versus usual care, of two alternative referral strategies to increase Feed1st program utilization and impact.
Standard of Care
Usual care includes passive delivery of information from nursing staff about all available food options in the hospital including the self-serve food pantries in the standard Caregiver FYI Admissions Packet.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Feed1st
Feed1st is a unique hospital-based hunger mitigation program that, since 2010, has operated low-cost, self-serve food pantries at Comer Children's Hospital. All parents and caregivers with a hospitalized child have 24/7 free access to these self-serve pantries with the option to eat food in the pantry, carry out as much food as needed, and contribute back to the pantry with food, volunteerism, or other resources. The program also offers free phone/text/email navigation for food support and other basic needs resources. We aim to conduct a 3-arm, randomized comparative effectiveness study to evaluate the impact, versus usual care, of two alternative referral strategies to increase Feed1st program utilization and impact.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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University of Chicago
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Stacy T Lindau, MD, MAPP
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Chicago
Other Identifiers
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IRB16-1434
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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