Implementation of a Patient-centered, Reproductive Planning Decision Support Tool (MyPath) Among Women With Substance Use Disorder in the Immediate Postpartum Period
NCT ID: NCT04939012
Last Updated: 2025-08-01
Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
400 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-10-11
2027-03-01
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Currently, there are no effective strategies to improve postpartum contraceptive decision-making for women with SUDs. As an initial step to address this gap, the investigators conducted an observational study of postpartum contraceptive choices among 194 women with OUD at our maternity hospital (Plan NOW). Per usual care, women were provided with information about all contraceptive options, consistent with "information-based" counseling, and access to all methods including immediate postpartum LARC. Several findings informed this proposal. First, women's postpartum contraceptive decisions were often inconsistent with their childbearing goals. Among women who did not want another child, 36% did not choose a highly effective method and 10% had a repeat pregnancy within one year. Second, women had limited contraceptive knowledge and frequent misconceptions about their fertility and vulnerability to pregnancy. Third, women's decisional autonomy regarding sex and contraception was often threatened due to ongoing illicit drug use and reproductive coercion by partners. Fourth, women who wanted another baby did not feel supported and often felt pressured to choose a highly effective method. Therefore, failure to frame contraceptive decisions within the larger reproductive health context of women with OUD was a major barrier to high quality decision-making.
The goal of this research is to help women with SUDs make informed decisions about their reproductive health that align with their preferences, values and reproductive goals. Our objective in this application is to determine the effect of a novel patient-centered, reproductive planning decision support tool developed by the research team called MyPath on postpartum contraceptive decision-making among women with SUDs. Designed to facilitate high-quality decisions regarding pregnancy and contraception, MyPath helps women a) review their thoughts about pregnancy and children, b) learn about fertility and preconception health and c) prioritize their preferences for various contraceptive method characteristics (e.g. effectiveness, side effects). As such, MyPath uses a patient-centered approach to help women frame their contraceptive decisions in the context of their goals and health and is a critical first step towards addressing reproductive health inequities among women with SUDs. Our overarching hypothesis is that patient-centered, reproductive planning decision support will facilitate high quality decision-making and thus improve postpartum contraceptive utilization and reproductive health outcomes among women with SUDs. To test this hypothesis, the investigators propose a hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation randomized controlled trial, guided by the following aims:
Aim 1: Assess the effect of patient-centered, reproductive planning decision support (MyPath) on postpartum contraceptive utilization and reproductive health outcomes among women with SUDs
Aim 2: Determine if the relationship between MyPath and contraceptive utilization is mediated by decision quality. Decision quality will be measured using four patient-centered components of decision-making: knowledge, values concordance, decisional conflict and involvement. The investigators hypothesize that improvements in decision quality will mediate the relationship between MyPath and contraceptive utilization.
Aim 3: Identify barriers and facilitators to integrating MyPath into routine postpartum clinical care. The investigators will gather process evaluation data during the randomized controlled trial (RCT) and conduct qualitative interviews with key patient, provider and health system stakeholders to identify potential barriers and facilitators to future implementation in maternity settings and routine postpartum clinical care, if MyPath is found to be effective.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
NONE
Study Groups
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MyPath Intervention
At the first visit participants randomized to this arm receive MyPath contraceptive decision tool.
MyPath Intervention
MyPath is a novel patient-centered, reproductive planning decision support tool developed by the research team used to facilitate postpartum contraceptive decision-making among women with SUDs. Designed to facilitate high-quality decisions regarding pregnancy and contraception, MyPath helps women a) review their thoughts about pregnancy and children, b) learn about fertility and preconception health and c) prioritize their preferences for various contraceptive method characteristics (e.g. effectiveness, side effects). As such, MyPath uses a patient-centered approach to help women frame their contraceptive decisions in the context of their goals and health and is a critical first step towards addressing reproductive health inequities among women with SUDs.
Standard of Care
At the first visit participants randomized to this arm receive standard of care contraceptive counseling.
Usual care
Standard of Care
Interventions
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MyPath Intervention
MyPath is a novel patient-centered, reproductive planning decision support tool developed by the research team used to facilitate postpartum contraceptive decision-making among women with SUDs. Designed to facilitate high-quality decisions regarding pregnancy and contraception, MyPath helps women a) review their thoughts about pregnancy and children, b) learn about fertility and preconception health and c) prioritize their preferences for various contraceptive method characteristics (e.g. effectiveness, side effects). As such, MyPath uses a patient-centered approach to help women frame their contraceptive decisions in the context of their goals and health and is a critical first step towards addressing reproductive health inequities among women with SUDs.
Usual care
Standard of Care
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Be greater than or equal to 18 years of age.
* Be pregnant with an EGA of 22 to 37 weeks at enrollment.
* Plan to deliver at MWH.
* Meet DSM-5 criteria for a SUD (i.e., opioid, stimulant or other use disorder) and/or have a diagnosis code for a substance use disorder in their medical record.
Postpartum Cohort:
* Be greater than or equal to 18 years of age.
* Be 0-9 days postpartum at enrollment.
* Have delivered at MWH.
* Meet DSM-5 criteria for a SUD (i.e., opioid, stimulant or other use disorder) and/or have a diagnosis code for a substance use disorder in their medical record.
Exclusion Criteria
* Be currently in jail or prison as required by court of law. Persons on probation or in residential facilities do not need to be excluded.
* Have any other condition (social or medical) which, in the opinion of the Investigator, would make study participation unsafe, make study participation difficult, and/or complicate data interpretation.
18 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
NIH
University of Pittsburgh
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Elizabeth Krans, MD
Assistant Professor
Principal Investigators
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Elizabeth Krans, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Pittsburgh
Locations
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Magee Womens Hospital of UPMC
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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STUDY20110324
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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