TY - JOUR AU - N. Byatt AU - M. Zimmermann AU - T. C. Lightbourne AU - P. Sankaran AU - U. K. Haider AU - R. C. Sheldrick AU - M. Eliasziw AU - T. A. Moore Simas A1 - AB - BACKGROUND: Mood and anxiety disorders affect one in 5 perinatal individuals and are undertreated. While professional organizations and policy makers recommend that obstetric practices screen for, assess and treat mood and anxiety disorders, multi-level barriers to doing so exist. To help obstetric practices implement the recommended standard of care, we developed implementation assistance, an approach to guide practices on how to integrate screening, assessment, and treatment of mood and anxiety disorders into the obstetric practice workflow. To teach obstetric care clinicians how to treat perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, we also developed an e-learning course and toolkit. OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the extent to which 1) implementation assistance + e-learning/toolkit, and 2) e-learning/toolkit alone improved the rates and quality of care for perinatal mood and anxiety disorders in obstetric practices, as compared to usual care. STUDY DESIGN: We conducted a cluster randomized controlled trial involving 13 obstetric practices across the United States (US). Using 2:2:1 randomization, 13 obstetric practices were assigned to 1) implementation assistance + e-learning/toolkit (n=5), 2) e-learning/toolkit alone (n=5), or 3) usual care (n=3). We measured obstetric care clinicians' quality of care for perinatal mood and anxiety disorders (as measured by medical record documentation of screening, assessment, treatment initiation, and monitoring) documented in patient charts (n=1040). Effectiveness was assessed using multilevel generalized linear mixed models, accounting for clustering of repeated measurements (n=2, i.e., pre and post) within obstetric care clinicians' patient charts (n=40) nested within practices (n=13). Intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses were conducted. RESULTS: At baseline, no significant differences were observed among the 3 groups regarding documented mental health screening. Chart abstraction at 8 months post-training revealed a significant increase in recommended bipolar disorder screening only among the practices that received the implementation plus e-learning/toolkit (from 0.0% to 30.0%; p=.017). Practices receiving the e-learning/toolkit alone or usual care continued to not screen for bipolar disorder. Documented screening for anxiety also increased in the implementation + e-learning/toolkit group (from 0.5% to 40.2%), however, it did not reach statistical significance when compared to the other groups (P=.09). A significant increase in documented post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) screening was observed among practices receiving the implementation plus e-learning/toolkit (0.0% to 30.0%; P=.018). The quality-of-care score in the implementation + e-learning toolkit group increased from 20.5 at baseline to 42.8 at follow-up and was significantly different from both the e-learning/toolkit alone group (P=.02) and the usual care group (P=.03). At 8 months post-training, the implementation + e-learning/toolkit group had higher mean provider readiness scores than the other 2 groups for documentation of screening, assessment, and monitoring. However, documentation of treatment was the only component that reached statistical significance (P=.025). CONCLUSION: Among the practices that followed the implementation protocols, implementation assistance + e-learning/toolkit was effective in improving rates of screening for bipolar disorder, anxiety, and PTSD. However, 3 of the 5 practices did not follow the implementation protocols, suggesting that the intensity of the implementation needs to be tailored based on practice readiness for implementation. AD - Departments of Psychiatry, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Quantitative Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Shrewsbury, MA (Byatt); Department of Psychiatry, UMass Memorial Health, Shrewsbury, MA (Byatt). Electronic address: Nancy.byatt@umassmemorial.org.; Department of Psychiatry, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Shrewsbury, MA (Zimmermann, Sankaran, and Sheldrick).; Department of Psychiatry, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Worcester, MA (Lightbourne); Department of Psychiatry, UMass Memorial Health, Worcester, MA (Lightbourne and Haider).; Department of Psychiatry, UMass Memorial Health, Worcester, MA (Lightbourne and Haider); Departments of Psychiatry, Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Worcester, MA (Haider).; Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tufts University, Boston, MA (Eliasziw).; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Psychiatry, Pediatrics, Population and Quantitative Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Worcester, MA (Simas); UMass Memorial Health Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Worcester, MA (Simas). AN - 39756546 BT - Am J Obstet Gynecol MFM C5 - Healthcare Disparities CP - 2 DA - Feb DO - 10.1016/j.ajogmf.2024.101599 DP - NLM ET - 20250103 IS - 2 JF - Am J Obstet Gynecol MFM LA - eng N2 - BACKGROUND: Mood and anxiety disorders affect one in 5 perinatal individuals and are undertreated. While professional organizations and policy makers recommend that obstetric practices screen for, assess and treat mood and anxiety disorders, multi-level barriers to doing so exist. To help obstetric practices implement the recommended standard of care, we developed implementation assistance, an approach to guide practices on how to integrate screening, assessment, and treatment of mood and anxiety disorders into the obstetric practice workflow. To teach obstetric care clinicians how to treat perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, we also developed an e-learning course and toolkit. OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the extent to which 1) implementation assistance + e-learning/toolkit, and 2) e-learning/toolkit alone improved the rates and quality of care for perinatal mood and anxiety disorders in obstetric practices, as compared to usual care. STUDY DESIGN: We conducted a cluster randomized controlled trial involving 13 obstetric practices across the United States (US). Using 2:2:1 randomization, 13 obstetric practices were assigned to 1) implementation assistance + e-learning/toolkit (n=5), 2) e-learning/toolkit alone (n=5), or 3) usual care (n=3). We measured obstetric care clinicians' quality of care for perinatal mood and anxiety disorders (as measured by medical record documentation of screening, assessment, treatment initiation, and monitoring) documented in patient charts (n=1040). Effectiveness was assessed using multilevel generalized linear mixed models, accounting for clustering of repeated measurements (n=2, i.e., pre and post) within obstetric care clinicians' patient charts (n=40) nested within practices (n=13). Intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses were conducted. RESULTS: At baseline, no significant differences were observed among the 3 groups regarding documented mental health screening. Chart abstraction at 8 months post-training revealed a significant increase in recommended bipolar disorder screening only among the practices that received the implementation plus e-learning/toolkit (from 0.0% to 30.0%; p=.017). Practices receiving the e-learning/toolkit alone or usual care continued to not screen for bipolar disorder. Documented screening for anxiety also increased in the implementation + e-learning/toolkit group (from 0.5% to 40.2%), however, it did not reach statistical significance when compared to the other groups (P=.09). A significant increase in documented post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) screening was observed among practices receiving the implementation plus e-learning/toolkit (0.0% to 30.0%; P=.018). The quality-of-care score in the implementation + e-learning toolkit group increased from 20.5 at baseline to 42.8 at follow-up and was significantly different from both the e-learning/toolkit alone group (P=.02) and the usual care group (P=.03). At 8 months post-training, the implementation + e-learning/toolkit group had higher mean provider readiness scores than the other 2 groups for documentation of screening, assessment, and monitoring. However, documentation of treatment was the only component that reached statistical significance (P=.025). CONCLUSION: Among the practices that followed the implementation protocols, implementation assistance + e-learning/toolkit was effective in improving rates of screening for bipolar disorder, anxiety, and PTSD. However, 3 of the 5 practices did not follow the implementation protocols, suggesting that the intensity of the implementation needs to be tailored based on practice readiness for implementation. PY - 2025 SN - 2589-9333 SP - 101599 ST - Addressing perinatal mood and anxiety disorders in obstetric settings: results of a cluster randomized controlled trial of two approaches T1 - Addressing perinatal mood and anxiety disorders in obstetric settings: results of a cluster randomized controlled trial of two approaches T2 - Am J Obstet Gynecol MFM TI - Addressing perinatal mood and anxiety disorders in obstetric settings: results of a cluster randomized controlled trial of two approaches U1 - Healthcare Disparities U3 - 10.1016/j.ajogmf.2024.101599 VL - 7 VO - 2589-9333 Y1 - 2025 ER -