Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Prenatal Mentalization-focused 4D Ultrasound and a Pregnancy Diary Intervention for Substance-abusing Women
Objective: This randomized and controlled trial was aimed at exploring the effect of a new
mentalization-focused 4D interactive ultrasound and a week-by-week pregnancy diary
intervention with substance-abusing pregnant women.
Method: Pregnant women referred to the hospital maternity outpatient clinic from primary
health care due to substance abuse were recruited to participate in a randomized and
controlled study. At admission, a psychiatric nurse offered all eligible women an opportunity
for participation. A written informed consent was obtained from all participants included in
the study. The participants were randomized into the intervention and control groups using a
computer-generated block-randomization with block size of four. A separate randomization
assignment was used for women in medication-assisted treatment for opioid dependence.
The intervention group subjects were offered three mentalization-focused interactive 4D
ultrasounds at 24, 30 and 34 gestational weeks and a mentalization-focused week-by-week
pregnancy diary combined with three antenatal sessions and an option for one diary session
after delivery. The control group received active treatment as usual in an obstetric tertiary
setting.
The pregnant woman and the child were followed-up until the child was one year old. The
primary outcome was prenatal maternal depressive symptoms post-intervention, and secondary
outcomes were anxiety symptoms, prenatal parental mentalization, maternal-fetal attachment
and substance abuse. Other outcomes were utilisation of prenatal care, perinatal outcome,
neonatal withdrawal symptoms and neonatal neurobehavior, postnatal maternal depressive and
anxiety symptoms, parental mentalization, experienced stress from parenting and experienced
social support, and emotional connection and commitment with the baby.
The study was conducted at the hospital maternity outpatient clinic for substance-abusing
pregnant women at Turku University Hospital (Finland) between October 2011 and December 2015.
The registration of the trial is made retrospectively, but the research plan and outcomes are
reported in this registration as they were originally documented in the research plan
approved by The Joint Ethics Committee of the University of Turku and the Hospital District
of Southwest Finland on 14th of June 2011.
Objective:
The aim of this controlled trial was to explore the effect of a new mentalization-focused 4D
interactive ultrasound and a week-by-week pregnancy diary intervention with substance-abusing
pregnant women.
Method:
This trial was conducted at the maternity outpatient clinic for substance-abusing pregnant
women at Turku University Hospital, Finland, between October 2011 and December 2015. At Turku
University Hospital there is a specialized antenatal outpatient clinic for pregnant women
with substance abuse problems. Pregnant women referred to this facility from primary health
care due to substance abuse were invited to participate the trial.
At admission, a psychiatric nurse offered all eligible women an opportunity to participate in
the randomized trial. A written informed consent was obtained from all individual
participants included in the study. The participants were randomized into the intervention
and control groups using a computer-generated block-randomization with block size of four,
and a separate randomization assignment was used for women in medication-assisted treatment
for opioid addiction. In post-intervention phase at 35 gestational weeks, all participants
were compensated with a 20 euros gift card targeted to the infant's needs. The research plan
was approved by The Joint Ethics Committee of the University of Turku and the Hospital
District of Southwest Finland on the 14th of June 2011.
Description of the intervention and the control condition:
The intervention group subjects were offered three mentalization-focused interactive 4D
ultrasounds at 24, 30 and 34 gestational weeks and a mentalization-focused week-by-week
pregnancy diary combined with three prenatal sessions and option for one diary session after
delivery. Detailed intervention method description including a theoretical background of the
intervention is already published and available (Pajulo et al. 2016).
1. Mentalization-focused interactive use of 4D ultrasound imaging:
Three interactive 4D ultrasound sessions were offered for the intervention group
participants at 24, 30 and 34 gestational weeks at the maternity outpatient clinic. The
pregnant women participated in the sessions alone. The ultrasound sessions took around
20-30 minutes, and were performed by an experienced obstetrician and an infant mental
health professional working in cooperation. The sessions were based on the intervention
method called "ultrasound consultation" (Boukydis & Stockman, 2012; Boukydis, 2006)
where the idea is to observe the fetus together with the parent(s); the fetal features,
position, sleep-awake rhythm, personal characteristics, activities in the uterus and
responses to mother's initiatives for interaction.The aim is to evoke the mother`s
active interest in this particular child and hence to enhance parental mentalization and
maternal-fetal attachment.
2. The mentalization-focused week-by-week pregnancy diary:
To keep the fetus more actively in the mother's mind across pregnancy, a new
mentalization-focused pregnancy diary was designed for the intervention group. Three prenatal
meetings (45 minutes) with the infant mental health professional were offered for reflecting
the mother's experiences on using the diary. The diary contains short sections for each
pregnancy week including information about pregnancy, fetal development and health promoting
practices. The key elements in the diary are the mentalization-focused questions and tasks
encouraging the pregnant woman to reflect on her fetus and pregnancy and becoming a parent.
The control condition:
The intervention and control group received active treatment as usual in an obstetric
tertiary setting, and treatment as usual formed the control condition for the intervention.
The treatment was offered by a multidisciplinary team consisting of an obstetrician, a
midwife, a social worker and a psychiatric nurse . The patients were referred to addiction
and psychiatric treatment when needed. The Child Protection Services were involved in
prenatal phase in accordance with the Finnish legislation.
Data collection:
The primary outcome was prenatal maternal depressive symptoms post-intervention, and
secondary outcomes were anxiety symptoms, prenatal parental mentalization, maternal-fetal
attachment and substance abuse. Other outcomes were utilisation of prenatal care, perinatal
outcome, neonatal withdrawal symptoms and neonatal neurobehavior, postnatal maternal
depressive and anxiety symptoms, parental mentalization, experienced stress from parenting
and experienced social support, and emotional connection and commitment with the baby.
The pregnant woman and her child were followed-up until the child was one year old. The data
was collected from multiple sources: standardized measures, questionnaires constructed for
the study and information available from hospital medical records. As a part of routine
clinical practice, the pregnant women were interviewed by the psychiatric nurse and the
social worker. The interviews based on the European Addiction Severity Index-questionnaire
(EuropASI) (Kokkevi & Hartgers, 1995), where the items regard maternal physical and mental
health, substance abuse, employment and income, legal status and close relationships.
Sociodemographic data was obtained by a ten-item questionnaire at baseline. Information
regarding maternal psychiatric diagnosis and/or history was based on documented self-report
or medical records. Information regarding maternal substance abuse was obtained through the
medical records, and was based on maternal self-report or clinical documentation
(intoxications, urine screening results, marks indicating intravenous substance abuse).
Meconium sample was collected after birth for detection of illicit drugs. Data regarding
utilisation of obstetric care and perinatal outcome was obtained from hospital medical
records.
The standardized measures used to assess maternal depressive and anxiety symptoms,
maternal-fetal attachment and parental mentalization were administered during pregnancy at
two time points, i.e. before and after intervention (< 24th and > 34th gestational weeks,
respectively). Routine postnatal follow-up visits at the socio pediatric unit were conducted
when the infant was at 3 months and 1 year age. Standardized measures were administered
during those follow-up visits to assess maternal postnatal depressive and anxiety symptoms,
parental mentalization, experienced stress from parenting and experienced social support, and
emotional connection and commitment with the baby. Medical records concerning health and
psychosocial situation of the mother and infant were available, based on informed consent,
until the child was one year old. The assessment time points and measures were the same for
both groups.
The registration of the trial is made retrospectively, but the research plan and outcomes are
reported in this registration as they were originally documented in the research plan
approved by The Joint Ethics Committee of the University of Turku and the Hospital District
of Southwest Finland on 14th of June 2011.
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