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| Funder | Forte |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Umeå University |
| Country | Sweden |
| Start Date | Jan 01, 2024 |
| End Date | Dec 31, 2026 |
| Duration | 1,095 days |
| Number of Grantees | 8 |
| Roles | Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator |
| Data Source | Swedish Research Council |
| Grant ID | 2023-00303_Forte |
Research problem and specific questionsMore than 1000 very preterm infants (< 32 weeks) are born every year in Sweden.
They are at high risk of neurodevelopmental disabilities and mental illness throughout the lifespan.The overall purpose is to develop and evaluate a novel e-health intervention aimed at improving neurodevelopment (cognitive, motor, feeding, language, socio-emotional) of very preterm infants by supporting responsive parenting behaviours.The primary research question is whether the intervention improves child neurodevelopment up to 2-years.
Further research questions relate to the emotional availability of parents and children, parental stress and overall experience as well as effects on health inequalities and gender effects.Data and methodUsing a multi-professional approach, we have developed a post-discharge “Intervention for Neurodevelopmental Support in Preterm Infants using Responsive parenting and E-health” (INSPIRE).
Parents of very preterm infants will be included in the program at hospital discharge and will receive the intervention in 16 sessions over a two-year period.We will first assess feasibility and refine the intervention in a pilot study including 20 families.
Thereafter, a randomized clinical trial will be performed to evaluate efficiency: Families will be randomized to the INSPIRE program or standard care.
Follow-up and assessment of children (and parents) across a range of crucial domains will be performed up to at least 2-years of age.Societal relevance and utilisationThe project will be the first in the world to use a digital e-health solution with video interaction to deliver a post-discharge parental support intervention to parents of very preterm infants.
The project has great potential to reduce the risk of cognitive impairment, behavioral problems, mental illness and eating disorders in these high-risk children, as well as improving mental health and well-being in the parents.
Parents of preterm infants are involved as co-creators in developing and evaluating the program.Plan for project realizationCurrently, there is no similar post-discharge program available.
Based on the results, we aim to implement a sustainable, nationwide, post-discharge e-health intervention program to improve health in very preterm-born children and their parents, which will also reduce health inequality by ensuring the availability of high-quality support to families living far away from highly specialized health care facilities.
Umeå University
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