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UnknownNCT03096574

Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) and Vaccination in Pregnancy

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
1,025 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
16 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) is the leading cause of chest infections (pneumonia and bronchiolitis) in young children, and is a major cause of admission to hospital and childhood death worldwide. One possible way to protect the mother and young infant from RSV infection is a vaccine given to women during pregnancy (maternal vaccination), which would pass protection to their unborn child. This may help to prevent RSV in the child's first few months of life when they are most vulnerable to infection. There are two main aims to this study: 1. To pre-emptively gauge the knowledge of RSV and potential acceptability of such vaccines amongst pregnant women and healthcare staff working in midwifery and obstetrics, as well as their attitudes (facilitators and barriers) to being involved in hypothetical future research trials. 2. We also wish to gauge the attitudes to routinely recommended vaccines in pregnancy (pertussis and influenza) The investigators propose to undertake a questionnaire-based study of randomly selected pregnant women and healthcare staff (over 16 years of age) at English teaching hospitals and GP practices. Pregnant women attending for ward reviews or antenatal clinics will approached and asked to complete an anonymous paper questionnaire lasting around 10 minutes. Healthcare staff will be approached in person, or via email, and asked to complete a slightly different questionnaire lasting around 5-10 minutes. No follow up will take place. Using statistical software, the investigators hope to identify factors that might affect patients' understanding of RSV and attitudes to being involved in hypothetical future trials and receiving routine vaccination

Detailed description

Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) is a very common virus that causes infection of the airways and lungs. It is the leading cause of chest infections (pneumonia and bronchiolitis) in young children, and is a major cause of admission to hospital and childhood death worldwide. Lots of research trials are being done into ways of preventing and treating RSV, however there is still no RSV vaccine approved for routine use. One possible way to protect the mother and young infant from RSV infection is a vaccine given to women during pregnancy, which would pass protection to their unborn child. This may help to prevent RSV in the child's first few months of life when they are most vulnerable to infection. There are two vaccines that are currently being tested in pregnant women around the world, including the UK. There are two main aims to this study: 1. To pre-emptively gauge the knowledge of RSV and potential acceptability of such vaccines amongst pregnant women and healthcare staff working in midwifery and obstetrics, as well as their attitudes (facilitators and barriers) to being involved in hypothetical future research trials. 2. We also wish to gauge the attitudes to routinely recommended vaccines in pregnancy (pertussis and influenza) The investigators propose to undertake a questionnaire-based study of randomly selected pregnant women and healthcare staff (over 16 years of age) at four English teaching hospitals. Pregnant women attending for ward reviews or antenatal clinics will approached and asked to complete an anonymous paper questionnaire lasting around 10 minutes. Healthcare staff will be approached in person, or via email, and asked to complete a slightly different questionnaire lasting around 5-10 minutes. No follow up will take place. Using statistical software, the investigators hope to identify factors that might affect patients' understanding of RSV and attitudes to being involved in hypothetical future trials and receiving routine vaccination

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERQuestionnaireThe participants will be approached by a member of the study team and, following recruitment, participants will be asked to fill in a short paper or online questionnaire. Our estimated time for completion is 5-10 minutes, and this time will be stated at the start of the questionnaire. Having completed the questionnaire they will be free to leave without further follow up, and given the contact details of the investigators/research governance office whom they can contact if they have further questions or concerns.

Timeline

Start date
2017-06-01
Primary completion
2019-11-01
Completion
2019-11-01
First posted
2017-03-30
Last updated
2018-11-19

Locations

4 sites across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03096574. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.