Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Have you recently delivered your baby and are you breastfeeding currently?

 

Our research team in the Thrombosis Centre at King’s College Hospital is looking for breastfeeding mothers for a research study aiming to find out whether new oral blood thinning medications pass into human breast milk.

The risk of developing blood clots is increased in women following the birth of a baby. Mothers who are at high risk of getting these clots or already have these clots are given blood thinning medications for at least 7 days after delivery and sometimes for up to 6 weeks.

 

Currently, only traditional blood thinning medicines (heparins and warfarin) can be prescribed to breastfeeding mothers as they are known to be safe during breastfeeding period. Many women find these medicines inconvenient, because they are required to inject heparins themselves at home or attend the clinic frequently for the monitoring of warfarin. In recent years, new blood thinning drugs, such as edoxaban and rivaroxaban, have become available in the UK. They can be taken as tablets and require no monitoring. However, it is not known whether these drugs pass into human breast milk in significant amounts.

 

The purpose of our research study is to investigate whether edoxaban or rivaroxaban pass into human breast milk, which will help to find out if these drugs could be used instead of heparin injections or warfarin for breastfeeding mothers.

 

You may be eligible to participate if you:

• Are breastfeeding currently and,

• Within 8 weeks of delivery

 

Study participation involves:

• Eligibility screening, which can be done at your home

• Taking the blood thinning medication allocated once a day for 3 days and having blood tests and providing breast milk for up to 6 days of the trial.

• Stop breastfeeding your baby for the time you take part in the trial.

 

For this study, we are aiming to recruit 12 women in total.

 

As a way of thanks for participation in the study and for your time, you will receive £300

 

For more information please contact: [email protected] or 07984949011

  • 4 weeks later...

Our team at King's College Hospital are still looking for women who have given birth within the last 8 weeks and breastfeeding and interested to take part in our study.

See attached poster for more details.

Many thanks,

Jignesh

[email protected]

Poster for New Horizons recuritment v2.0 19092022.pdf

  • 3 months later...

Our team at King's College Hospital is still recruiting volunteers who have recently or are expecting their baby and might be interested in our research study.

Please see attached poster for details.

volunteers are given £300 for taking part.

Please contact Jignesh Patel (07984 94 9011 / [email protected]) if interested.

Jignesh Patel

King's College Hospital

Poster for New Horizons recuritment v1.0 05062023 - newborns final.pdf

  • 4 months later...

Our research team at King’s College Hospital is looking for mothers who are up to 3 months post delivery for a research study aiming to find out whether new oral blood thinning medications pass into human breast milk.

The risk of developing blood clots is increased in women following the birth of a baby. Mothers who are at high risk of getting these clots or already have these clots are given blood thinning medications for at least 7 days after delivery and sometimes for up to 6 weeks. 


Currently, only traditional blood thinning medicines (heparins and warfarin) can be prescribed to breastfeeding mothers as they are known to be safe during breastfeeding period. Many women find these medicines inconvenient, because they are required to inject heparins themselves at home or attend the clinic frequently for the monitoring of warfarin. In recent years, new blood thinning drugs, such as edoxaban and rivaroxaban, have become available in the UK. They can be taken as tablets and require no monitoring. However, it is not known whether these drugs pass into human breast milk in significant amounts. 


The purpose of our research study is to investigate whether edoxaban or rivaroxaban pass into human breast milk, which will help to find out if these drugs could be used instead of heparin injections or warfarin for breastfeeding mothers. 

You may be eligible to participate if you: 
• Are breastfeeding currently or able to express breastmilk and,  
• Within 12 weeks of delivery

Study participation involves:
• Eligibility screening, which can be done at your home
• Taking the blood thinning medication allocated once a day for 3 days and having blood tests and providing breastmilk for up to 6 days of the trial.
• Stop breastfeeding your baby for the time you take part in the trial.

For this study, we are aiming to recruit 12 women in total.

As a way of thanks for participation in the study and for your time, you will receive £300

For more information please contact: [email protected] or 07984949011

New Horizons PIL v1.6.pdf

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • It's such an uneven provision, I live just west of E Dulwich towards Herne Hill/Dulwich Village and there are four Post Office counters within 10 mins walk max. They are all in local shops and provide a great service. 
    • Wanted to come on and do a review for DRJ Builders as I know how hard it is to find good quality and reliable builders in the area! David O'Brien and DRJ Builders are more than that - they are an absolutely brilliant building firm who we can highly recommend. We used them to do a side return extension, loft extension and full house renovation in 2016. They did such a great job, we have just used them again to add on a new rear extension to the ground floor in 2025. David is great to work with from start to finish and has a fantastic team of tradespeople who always deliver a very high standard of work. Would highly recommend them. You can get David on 07960 938621.
    • They do have other lockers where you can drop off parcels, as well as some shops who will take them. If you use the Royal Mail app, or website, you can also arrange for collection of parcels from your house. The service is actually pretty good (and a lot easier than going to the post office). There are a lack of Royal Mail lockers though. Would be good to get some more - perhaps one on North Cross road? They don't need to be outside the Post Office necessarilly.
    • In a similar  vein, are there any charity shops actually taking donations at the moment? ( after the usual post  Christmas chucking out phase, noone would take my things last week, they had too much already).
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...