| Literature DB >> 29364217 |
Linda S Franck1, Monica R McLemore2, Norlissa Cooper3, Baylee De Castro4, Anastasia Y Gordon5, Schyneida Williams6, Shanell Williams7, Larry Rand8.
Abstract
Involvement of patients and the public is now recognized to be essential for the good conduct of research. Patient and public involvement in research priority setting and funding decisions is only beginning to be recognized as important, and methods for doing so are nascent. This protocol describes the Research Prioritization by Affected Communities (RPAC) protocol and findings from its use with women at high socio-demographic risk for preterm birth. The goal was to directly involve these women in identifying and prioritizing their unanswered questions about pregnancy, birth and neonatal care, and treatment so that their views could be included in research priority setting by funders and researchers. The RPAC protocol may be used to meaningfully involve under-represented groups at high-risk for specific health problems, or those who face disproportionate burden of disease, in research strategy and funding priority setting.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29364217 PMCID: PMC5908549 DOI: 10.3791/56220
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vis Exp ISSN: 1940-087X Impact factor: 1.355

| How does a mother’s stress affect the baby? |
| What are the most effective ways to improve patient-provider communication, particularly when patients perceive insensitive and rude comments from health care workers? |
| What is the most effective care for pregnancy and high-risk pregnancy? For example, if African American women are at higher risk, why isn’t there specialized care to improve outcomes? |
| What causes Sudden Infant Death Syndrome? |
| Does the type of insurance you have determine the type of care that you get, or the quality of your care and is care different based on insurance status or race? |
| What could make hospital visits and in-hospital stays easier for families and what supports are most helpful for moms with children at home? |
| What medicines are safe to take during pregnancy? |
| How do birth plans help and how can the health care team better follow a woman’s birth plan? |
| How do health care providers decide to involve Child Protective Services during pregnancy care when abuse and neglect are not clearly present? |
| Could experienced moms be used more effectively for breastfeeding support? |
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| 1 | Stress during pregnancy and its impact on women and infants |
| 2 | Standards for monitoring and care of women with high risk pregnancies |
| 3 | Impact of employment and insurance coverage on care and outcomes |
| 4 | Safety of drugs and substances during pregnancy and for newborns |
| 5 | Provider-patient communications and decision-making |
| 6 | Breastfeeding support |
| 7 | Standards for referral of women and families to social services |
| 8 | Causes and prevention of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome |
| 9 | Support for mothers and babies at home |