Protocol for cost-effectiveness analysis of a randomised trial of mHealth coaching (Bump2Baby and Me) compared with usual care for healthy gestational weight gain and postnatal outcomes in at-risk women and their offspring in the UK, Australia, Ireland and Spain

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Protocol for cost-effectiveness analysis of a randomised trial of mHealth coaching (Bump2Baby and Me) compared with usual care for healthy gestational weight gain and postnatal outcomes in at-risk women and their offspring in the UK, Australia, Ireland and Spain. / Nørmark, Laura Pirhonen; Mcauliffe, Fionnuala; Maindal, Helle Terkildsen; O'Reilly, Sharleen; Davies, Anna; Burden, Christy; Skinner, Timothy C.; Vrangbæk, Karsten; Callander, Emily.

In: BMJ Open, Vol. 14, No. 5, e080823, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nørmark, LP, Mcauliffe, F, Maindal, HT, O'Reilly, S, Davies, A, Burden, C, Skinner, TC, Vrangbæk, K & Callander, E 2024, 'Protocol for cost-effectiveness analysis of a randomised trial of mHealth coaching (Bump2Baby and Me) compared with usual care for healthy gestational weight gain and postnatal outcomes in at-risk women and their offspring in the UK, Australia, Ireland and Spain', BMJ Open, vol. 14, no. 5, e080823. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080823

APA

Nørmark, L. P., Mcauliffe, F., Maindal, H. T., O'Reilly, S., Davies, A., Burden, C., Skinner, T. C., Vrangbæk, K., & Callander, E. (2024). Protocol for cost-effectiveness analysis of a randomised trial of mHealth coaching (Bump2Baby and Me) compared with usual care for healthy gestational weight gain and postnatal outcomes in at-risk women and their offspring in the UK, Australia, Ireland and Spain. BMJ Open, 14(5), [e080823]. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080823

Vancouver

Nørmark LP, Mcauliffe F, Maindal HT, O'Reilly S, Davies A, Burden C et al. Protocol for cost-effectiveness analysis of a randomised trial of mHealth coaching (Bump2Baby and Me) compared with usual care for healthy gestational weight gain and postnatal outcomes in at-risk women and their offspring in the UK, Australia, Ireland and Spain. BMJ Open. 2024;14(5). e080823. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080823

Author

Nørmark, Laura Pirhonen ; Mcauliffe, Fionnuala ; Maindal, Helle Terkildsen ; O'Reilly, Sharleen ; Davies, Anna ; Burden, Christy ; Skinner, Timothy C. ; Vrangbæk, Karsten ; Callander, Emily. / Protocol for cost-effectiveness analysis of a randomised trial of mHealth coaching (Bump2Baby and Me) compared with usual care for healthy gestational weight gain and postnatal outcomes in at-risk women and their offspring in the UK, Australia, Ireland and Spain. In: BMJ Open. 2024 ; Vol. 14, No. 5.

Bibtex

@article{4275152348bd4eddadf8c19cf36a1248,
title = "Protocol for cost-effectiveness analysis of a randomised trial of mHealth coaching (Bump2Baby and Me) compared with usual care for healthy gestational weight gain and postnatal outcomes in at-risk women and their offspring in the UK, Australia, Ireland and Spain",
abstract = "Introduction Gestational diabetes mellitus and overweight are associated with an increased likelihood of complications during birth and for the newborn baby. These complications lead to increased immediate and long-term healthcare costs as well as reduced health and well-being in women and infants. This protocol presents the health economic evaluation to investigate the cost-effectiveness of Bump2Baby and Me (B2B&Me), which is a health coaching intervention delivered via smartphone to women at risk of gestational diabetes. Methods and analysis Using data from the B2B&Me randomised controlled trial, this economic evaluation compares costs and health effects between the intervention and control group as an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. Direct healthcare costs, costs of pharmaceuticals and intervention costs will be included in the analysis, body weight and quality-adjusted life-years for the mother will serve as the effect outcomes. To investigate the long-term cost-effectiveness of the trial, a Markov model will be employed. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analysis will be employed. Ethics and dissemination The National Maternity Hospital Human Research and Ethics Committee was the primary approval site (EC18.2020) with approvals from University College Dublin HREC-Sciences (LS-E-20-150-OReilly), Junta de Andalucia CEIM/CEI Provincial de Granada (2087-M1-22), Monash Health HREC (RES-20-0000-892A) and National Health Service Health Research Authority and Health and Care Research Wales (HCRW) (21/WA/0022). The results from the analysis will be disseminated in scientific papers, through conference presentations and through different channels for communication within the project. ",
keywords = "Diabetes in pregnancy, HEALTH ECONOMICS, Randomized Controlled Trial",
author = "N{\o}rmark, {Laura Pirhonen} and Fionnuala Mcauliffe and Maindal, {Helle Terkildsen} and Sharleen O'Reilly and Anna Davies and Christy Burden and Skinner, {Timothy C.} and Karsten Vrangb{\ae}k and Emily Callander",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 Author(s) (or their employer(s)).",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080823",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "BMJ Open",
issn = "2044-6055",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Protocol for cost-effectiveness analysis of a randomised trial of mHealth coaching (Bump2Baby and Me) compared with usual care for healthy gestational weight gain and postnatal outcomes in at-risk women and their offspring in the UK, Australia, Ireland and Spain

AU - Nørmark, Laura Pirhonen

AU - Mcauliffe, Fionnuala

AU - Maindal, Helle Terkildsen

AU - O'Reilly, Sharleen

AU - Davies, Anna

AU - Burden, Christy

AU - Skinner, Timothy C.

AU - Vrangbæk, Karsten

AU - Callander, Emily

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 Author(s) (or their employer(s)).

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Introduction Gestational diabetes mellitus and overweight are associated with an increased likelihood of complications during birth and for the newborn baby. These complications lead to increased immediate and long-term healthcare costs as well as reduced health and well-being in women and infants. This protocol presents the health economic evaluation to investigate the cost-effectiveness of Bump2Baby and Me (B2B&Me), which is a health coaching intervention delivered via smartphone to women at risk of gestational diabetes. Methods and analysis Using data from the B2B&Me randomised controlled trial, this economic evaluation compares costs and health effects between the intervention and control group as an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. Direct healthcare costs, costs of pharmaceuticals and intervention costs will be included in the analysis, body weight and quality-adjusted life-years for the mother will serve as the effect outcomes. To investigate the long-term cost-effectiveness of the trial, a Markov model will be employed. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analysis will be employed. Ethics and dissemination The National Maternity Hospital Human Research and Ethics Committee was the primary approval site (EC18.2020) with approvals from University College Dublin HREC-Sciences (LS-E-20-150-OReilly), Junta de Andalucia CEIM/CEI Provincial de Granada (2087-M1-22), Monash Health HREC (RES-20-0000-892A) and National Health Service Health Research Authority and Health and Care Research Wales (HCRW) (21/WA/0022). The results from the analysis will be disseminated in scientific papers, through conference presentations and through different channels for communication within the project.

AB - Introduction Gestational diabetes mellitus and overweight are associated with an increased likelihood of complications during birth and for the newborn baby. These complications lead to increased immediate and long-term healthcare costs as well as reduced health and well-being in women and infants. This protocol presents the health economic evaluation to investigate the cost-effectiveness of Bump2Baby and Me (B2B&Me), which is a health coaching intervention delivered via smartphone to women at risk of gestational diabetes. Methods and analysis Using data from the B2B&Me randomised controlled trial, this economic evaluation compares costs and health effects between the intervention and control group as an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. Direct healthcare costs, costs of pharmaceuticals and intervention costs will be included in the analysis, body weight and quality-adjusted life-years for the mother will serve as the effect outcomes. To investigate the long-term cost-effectiveness of the trial, a Markov model will be employed. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analysis will be employed. Ethics and dissemination The National Maternity Hospital Human Research and Ethics Committee was the primary approval site (EC18.2020) with approvals from University College Dublin HREC-Sciences (LS-E-20-150-OReilly), Junta de Andalucia CEIM/CEI Provincial de Granada (2087-M1-22), Monash Health HREC (RES-20-0000-892A) and National Health Service Health Research Authority and Health and Care Research Wales (HCRW) (21/WA/0022). The results from the analysis will be disseminated in scientific papers, through conference presentations and through different channels for communication within the project.

KW - Diabetes in pregnancy

KW - HEALTH ECONOMICS

KW - Randomized Controlled Trial

U2 - 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080823

DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080823

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38772891

AN - SCOPUS:85194023349

VL - 14

JO - BMJ Open

JF - BMJ Open

SN - 2044-6055

IS - 5

M1 - e080823

ER -

ID: 398058031