487-P: Exploring the Research Experiences of American Indian Mother/Daughter Dyads and Site Coordinators after a GDM Risk Reduction and Preconception Counseling Randomized Controlled Trial

2021 
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is the most common complication of pregnancy and contributes to increased risk for T2D in both the mother and offspring. American Indians are at higher risk of GDM and subsequent diagnosis of T2D than non-Hispanic white women. This project examined the experiences of American Indian mother-daughter (M-D) dyads as participants and the site coordinators who facilitated a GDM risk reduction and preconception counseling randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate Stopping GDM (SGDM). The SGDM RCT included 4 visits over 9 months which dyads attended together but completed SGDM intervention (video and eBook) and questionnaires separately. SGDM content included GDM risk reduction (e.g., healthy nutrition), GDM risk awareness/health beliefs, preconception counseling, reproductive health communication, and family planning. For this study, dyads (n=22 dyads) were recruited from three of the five study sites and site coordinators from all sites participated (n=6). Mothers, daughters, and site coordinators were in separate focus groups. Focus groups were facilitated by trained qualitative researchers, conducted/recorded remotely using Zoom, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using qualitative content analysis and Atlas.ti. Themes include: 1) SGDM provided valuable quality time and conversation about GDM and reproductive health among dyads; 2) GDM risk factors and risk reduction was largely new information for most dyads; 3) all sites experienced challenges to study engagement and recruitment; 4) recommendations for study improvement: personalized recruitment that is clinic-based and mother-focused; remote/asynchronous study visits; and significantly shorter content. These findings will be used to inform revisions of SGDM to improve the program and for a broader, more inclusive version of the program for other at-risk females. Disclosure S. A. Stotz: None. A. F. Fischl: None. M. A. Terry: None. H. Garrow: None. N. O’banion: None. L. Chalmers: None. K. R. Moore: None. D. Charron-prochownik: None. Funding National Institutes of Health (UL1TR001857 to D.C-P.); National Institute of Nursing Research (1R01NR014831-01A1 to D.C-P., K.R.M.)
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