I am excited to report that we have finished enrollment in our tongue-tie study. We had over 100 mother/baby participants. I have been doing a one week follow up call for each participant and am glad to have called or tried to call 75 of those mothers so far. The greatest accomplishment by far is having the IRB Interagency Agreement (IAA) signed and completed by both schools. Working with the IRB for 2 schools has been challenging and I have learned so much. The next step is to finish the last 30 calls, enter and review the data, and write up an abstract. The last step is to present the practicum the first week of December.
Category Archives: Ellen Lechtenberg
IRB approval – finally!
This month I have learned two valuable lessons as I have worked on the practicum project. The first and most important is the role and process of the IRB. Just as most of the students in my class have been finishing up their practicum projects, I have just received approval to begin! The IRB application was sent in early spring and has taken this long to be reviewed and approved. My practicum project involves a research study with a protected and fragile population – newborns, which is why it has taken so long to be approved. The second lesson I have learned about tongue tie is that the definitions of tongue tie vary according to the different specialists and the assessment tools they use. A lecture I attended at the 2014 ILCA conference mentioned 8 different definitions of ankyloglossia. To make things more complicated, there are several assessment and classification tools. These tools are named after the key individual defining the assessment: Hazelbaker, Watson Genna/Coryllos, Murphy, Griffiths, and Todd-Hogan being the main tools. Our practicum project will be using the Hazelbaker assessment tool for frenulum function. It is felt to be superior and very accurate. We anticipate evaluating all newborns for tongue tie beginning next month for a three week period. Before the assessment starts, the lactation consultants doing the evaluations will have a review training on the Hazelbaker assessment tool. I was fortunate to be able to purchase this training video at the conference and visit with Alison Hazelbaker. This month I have continued to review articles pulled from the systematic review of the literature and am getting ready to work on the parent handout.
Tongue-Tie Prevalence Study
Tongue-Tie Prevalence Study
I am doing a tongue-tie prevalence study for my practicum with the University of Utah Public Health Department. I recently completed the CITI training for this school in addition to UMass-Amherst CITI requirements which were completed in Nutrition Assessment class. The IRB process has been interesting and fun to see in action. I am still waiting to hear final approval from the IRB and for the evaluation of newborns for tongue-tie. I won’t be doing the actual evaluation of tongue-tie as lactation consultants had been arranged to do this evaluation prior to my involvement in the study. I will be doing follow up phone calls with parents after diagnoses and discharge from the hospital.
Part of this practicum is to do an extensive literature search on tongue-tie which I have done looking at references from 2010 to present time. I am in the process of reviewing articles I have pulled on this subject and putting them into an evidence-based summary table. Other deliverables for this practicum include developing an educational handout for parents and writing an article to be published! I thought I would share 2 slides from a lecture comparing chocolates and levels of evidence. They are part of a series of lectures on evidence-based research from the University of Utah Nursing Department. The source is Dr. Ellen Fineout-Overholt and Dr. Barbara Wilson.
levels of evidence like chocolate
