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29
May
Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust (HDFT) has announced a research study has been launched in the district to help improve the health of children and families.
Pregnant women are being invited by their midwife to join the research programme which aims to find out what influences the health and wellbeing of families.
HDFT has become the latest NHS Trust to join Born and Bred in (BaBi), a network of local birth studies that work together to link existing data across health, education, and social care to create a picture of families’ lives over time.
The data will highlight any inequalities in the region and help to shape local services, creating a healthier environment for families.
If mothers to be wish to participate their routine health data will be recorded by the health services they access themselves or for their child.
Health researchers then link together routinely collected data from parent and child, such as such as blood pressure measurements or the details of baby’s height and weight to see how health care and services could be improved.
This helps researchers to create a bigger picture of the challenges within the district. It will give insights into what works well and what can be made better to improve local services for the future.
They may identify relationships between things that happen in pregnancy and a child’s future health, or highlight if childhood conditions such as asthma, are more prevalent in one particular area of the district.
One of the first local mums to sign up to the study was Georgina Fogarty, whose son, Freddie, was the first BaBi Harrogate baby. Georgina said:
Leanne Likaj, associate director of midwifery, at HDFT said:
The BaBi concept began in Bradford. The network now consists of 11 trusts, including Leeds, York and Scarborough, Doncaster and Hull.
More information about BaBi Harrogate is available here.
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