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NICU Utilization of Remote Voice Technology to Improve mateRnal Experience (NURTURE)
NCT07214597 · Vanderbilt University Medical Center
In plain English
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Official title
NICU Utilization of Remote Voice Technology to Improve mateRnal Experience (NURTURE): A Randomized Controlled Trial
About this study
This study is a randomized control trial that will test VoiceLove, a secure mobile app designed to help families communicate with their infants in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU).
Postpartum depression (PPD) is a major depressive disorder and is one of the most frequent childbirth complications. Mother-infant separation during the initial postpartum period, such as infant admission to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), impacts mother-infant bonding and increases PPD risk, which is 40% higher in mothers with children admitted to the NICU. The impact of PPD is substantial: reported poor quality of life, high-risk behaviors such as substance abuse or self-harm, and long-term impairments in child cognitive and emotional development. PPD impact on child development has potential to be magnified in the already vulnerable preterm infant population. Care in the NICU is, by design, focused on the health of the infant and ill-equipped to address parental mental health. High stress and burnout among NICU staff combined with limited resources for development of psychosocial programs targeting the parents of NICU patients underscore the need for simple, low-cost, and easily implemented interventions aimed at improving parental connectedness and reducing postpartum mental health disorders.
Lack of parental connectedness to their neonate during a NICU stay and low social support are two of the most powerful risk factors for developing PPD. Risk of PPD is decreased when parents have more contact, either physical or verbal, with their infant and a higher perceived social support system. When physical contact is not possible, voice contact may help foster feelings of connectedness to both the infant in the NICU, and to the parents' social circle. The medical team is another critical source of support poised to increase parental mental health. Mothers of infants in the NICU report increased depressive symptoms when their perception of nurse support is low, while increased communication between parents and the medical team improves parental well-being. Increased social support from loved ones and the medical care team is well positioned to significantly reduce PPD severity in parents of NICU infants. Thus, facilitation of communication between parents and healthcare providers, as well as between their friends and family, presents a low-cost, low effort means to dramatically impact parental mental health and well-being during a NICU admission.
VoiceLove Inc has developed a novel HIPAA-compliant mobile application that offers programmatic support and curated digital content (e.g., lullabies, music, environmental sounds) for infant-family interactions and enables expanded family engagement in hospital settings. VoiceLove mobile app circumvents barriers to communication through an electronic venue for direct patient-family-clinician interaction. Specifically for clinicians, VoiceLove is a safe and time-efficient tool for direct communication with absent family members, allowing more time for direct patient care.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
1. Infant:
1. Admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU)
2. Born at VUMC
3. Index admission (NOT a re-admission)
4. Born between 23+0 and 31+6 weeks
5. Expected to survive at least 2 weeks
6. Singleton gestation
2. Mother:
1. Age ≥ 18 years old
2. English speaking
3. Mother is the biological mother of the infant admitted to the NICU
4. Postpartum day 4 or less
3. Partner (NOTE: Partner enrollment is not required)
1. Mother agrees to partner's participation
2. Designated by mother as support person with infant access
Exclusion Criteria
1. Infant
a. Re-admission to NICU
2. Mother
1. No access to an Android or iOS smartphone
2. Unwilling to download the VoiceLove NICU app to their personal smartphone and unwilling to accept the terms and conditions of the VoiceLove app
3. No personal email address
4. Incarcerated at time of delivery or postpartum
5. Inability to obtain informed consent
i. Patient's clinician refuses enrollment of the patient ii. Patient is either mentally (acute psychosis) or physically (intubated or critically ill in the ICU) unable to provide informed consent f. Unable to approach the patient (staffing, patient unavailable) g. Mother is not the intended parent (plans adoption, is a surrogate, will not have custody of the infant)
3. Partner (NOTE: Partner enrollment is not required)
1. Age \< 18 years old
2. Not English speaking
3. Inability to obtain informed consent
4. No access to an Android or iOS smartphone that is different from the mother's smartphone
5. No access to an email address that is different from the mother's email address
6. Unwilling to download the VoiceLove NICU app to their personal smartphone and unwilling to accept the terms and conditions of the VoiceLove app
Study design
Enrollment target: 150 participants
Allocation: randomized
Masking: none
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2026-02-04
Estimated completion: 2028-01
Last updated: 2026-02-11
Interventions
Device: VoiceLove mobile phone application
Primary outcomes
- • Patient Engagement with the VoiceLove App (2-weeks post randomization.)
- • Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Score (EPDS) at 2-weeks post randomization. (2-weeks post randomization.)
Sponsor
Vanderbilt University Medical Center · other
With: National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Contacts & investigators
ContactMakenna Woods · contact · makenna.woods.1@vumc.org · 615-936-2938
InvestigatorSarah Osmundson · principal_investigator, Vanderbilt University Medical Center
All locations (1)
Vanderbilt University Medical CenterRecruiting
Nashville, Tennessee, United States