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RECRUITING
NCT06522022
NA

PTSD Screening in Pregnant Black Women

Sponsor: Emory University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This study will compare the effectiveness of two active screening interventions in improving post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms, maternal perinatal care utilization, satisfaction utilization of mental healthcare services, and maternal health and birth-related outcomes for Black pregnant women.

Official title: Comparing Two Screening Approaches for PTSD to Improve Health Outcomes in Pregnant Black Women

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

804

Start Date

2025-02-20

Completion Date

2029-03

Last Updated

2025-10-27

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Culturally Responsive SBIRT for OB

SBIRT is a well-established enhanced screening preventive intervention model that is feasible and acceptable for use with trauma-exposed patients and in minoritized communities and can be delivered in the OB clinic during a prenatal care visit. The elements include: 1. standardized screening for PTSD and depression using the Primary Care Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Screen (PC-PTSD-5) and the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Screening (EPDS) that will mirror brief screening practice; 2. explicit focus on concerns regarding mistrust, 3. psychoeducation on PTSD, depression, and the effects of trauma including medical trauma and traumatic loss on health/functioning, 4. motivational interviewing strategy components to promote awareness of psychological symptoms and engagement in culturally relevant resources including support/resources related to relevant social determinants of health, 5. teaching coping skills with culturally responsive technology tools

BEHAVIORAL

Brief Screening for PTSD

This well-established 5-minute in-clinic interview includes administration of the PC-PTSD-5, a 5-item PTSD screening tool by trained medical staff (nurse, physician's assistant). Providers receive approximately one hour of training in trauma-informed care and how to administer the screening protocol. This method is regularly used in primary care clinic settings with trauma-exposed veterans and is validated for use in civilian samples, including low-income Black adults utilizing urban safety net hospital medical clinics.

Locations (2)

Grady Health System

Atlanta, Georgia, United States

Truman Medical Center (TMC) system

Kansas City, Missouri, United States