A Randomized Control Trial to Improve Metabolic Outcomes in African American Pregnant Women
University of Illinois at Chicago
Summary
The purpose of this randomized controlled trial is to establish the effectiveness of a culturally targeted and individually tailored behavioral intervention to promote maternal glucose metabolism in African American women.
Description
This is a randomized controlled parallel-group trial with two arms. Potential subjects will be identified from the OB Clinics at UI health systems, the University of Illinois at Chicago. After baseline assessments, the subjects will be randomized to the attention control arm (Birth-Prep) or BETTER intervention.
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18–40 years
- Sex
- Female
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * African American pregnant woman. * Women between 16 and 22 GWs. * Overweight or obese - pregravid Body Mass Index \>25.0 kg/m2. * Singleton gestation. * Established prenatal care at The University of Illinois Hospital \& Health Sciences. * System Obstetric (UIHHSS' OB) clinics. Able to understand, speak and write in English. Exclusion Criteria: * Multiple gestations. * Night-shift work. * Diagnosed sleep disorders. * Known fetal chromosomal or anatomical abnormalities. * Diagnosed mood disorders. * Gestational diabetes in early pregnancy. * Glycated Hemoglobin (HbA1c)…
Interventions
- BehavioralBetter
It is a nonpharmacologic sleep intervention to improve maternal glucose metabolism in African American Pregnant Women (AAPW). Sleep BETTER is composed of sleep hygiene practices and cognitive-behavioral principles.
- BehavioralBirth Prep
The intervention involves training about pregnancy-related issues, and follow up
Locations (2)
- University of Illinois at ChicagoChicago, Illinois
- University of Illinois at ChicagoChicago, Illinois