Stress, Psychological Clinical Trial
Official title:
MAMA NO STRESS Project. The Effects of the "HAPPY MAMA" Intervention: a Field Randomized Trial
This study evaluates the effects of a postpartum intervention in increasing the maternal
well-being and self-efficacy of Italian women in the first one to six months after
childbirth, as well as in reducing postpartum depression and stress.
The intervention will use the motivational interviewing against high levels of daily stress.
One third of participants will be exposed to a 3,5 hours group intervention approximately 1
month after delivery, one third will be exposed to an individual intervention in the same
period and one third will receive no intervention. Participants will be followed with stress
and depression questionnaires.
Aim
The aim of this study is to assess the effectiveness of an intervention, called "HAPPY MAMA",
in reducing postpartum stress level, increasing the parenting self-efficacy and the maternal
well-being of Italian women in the first one to six months after childbirth.
Design of the study
The study will be an experimental pilot field trial. The present research will be a
multi-centric study to be conducted in three different hospitals in Rome. The CONSORT
statement will be followed to perform the research.
Eligibility criteria for participants
The following eligibility criteria will be applied:
- Participant must be a woman aged 18 years old or older;
- Participant must be able to communicate in Italian.
They following exclusion criteria will be applied:
- women will be excluded from the study if they or their babies have serious health
problems;
- the baby was born at <37 weeks gestation, weighed <2500 g;
- the baby has the APGAR score <7 immediately after birth. Participants will be recruited
from the Obstetrics Units of the following Hospitals: Teaching Hospital Umberto 1,
Teaching Hospital "Casilino" and "S. Giovanni Calibita Fatebenefratelli".
Furthermore for organizational reasons, only mothers that live in Rome will be enrolled.
The hospital recruitment of participants will be conducted at 0 to 3 days postpartum by the
researchers and research nurses using a brochure explaining the aim of the study.
The recruitment period will in two weeks. Prior to study participation all women who agree to
participate will be asked to sign a written consent form and to provide a contact phone
number and email.
Randomization
After taking the consent, the participants will be divided into three groups:
- group that will follow the "Collective intervention group," that will be called "G";
- group that will follow the "Individual intervention group," that will be called "I";
- control group that will be called "Control group" (C).
The allocation of the women in the groups will be randomly. The investigators will create a
random number sequence using Epicalc 2000. A researcher will assign the participants to the
groups following the number sequence as described below:
- Multiples of three (3,6,9,12, etc.) in G;
- Multiples of three+1 (1, 4, 7,10, etc.) in I;
- Multiple of three+2 (2, 5, 8, 11, etc.)in C.
The groups will be matched for followed variables:
- age (>31 years, 31 is the mean age of Italian women at childbirth (ISTAT, 2017));
- vaginal delivery (Yes/No).
Data collection
The recruitment period will be of two weeks. During the delivery hospital (T0), the
researchers will ask to sign consent forms from each participant and they will collect the
demographics information for matching and performing the randomization.
During T0 phase an unique code will be assigned to each women (for example a keyword composed
using the first three letter of her name and the last four numbers of her telephone number).
A check will be done of the uniqueness, and in case of overlap an adjustment it will be done.
For organizational reasons, one researcher has a paper sheet that reported the codes
associated to the women's names.
After the recruitment and the randomization phase, a message that contains the link to the
questionnaire will be sent by phone.
The questionnaire is created using a Google form.
The questionnaire will be administered four times:
- At T1: About 30 days weeks after the hospital delivery and 15 days, the last women
recruited:
- For G: the questionnaire will be administered on-line with a phone message with a
link to the questionnaire. The message will be sent 2/3 days before the collective
intervention. The meeting will be performed about15 days after the last women
recruited;
- For I: the questionnaire will be administered on-line with a phone message with a
link to the questionnaire. The message will be sent 2/3 days before the individual
intervention. The single intervention will be performed 30 days after the hospital
delivery (the 30 days is a hypothesis made considering that in the G group means
the time that has elapsed since of giving birth to the intervention is the median
range between 2 or 4 weeks).
- For women in the C group, the questionnaire will be administered online with a
phone message with a link to the questionnaire. The message will be sent 30 days
after the delivery.
- At T2: About two months after delivery:
- For G: the questionnaire will be administered online with a phone message with a
link to the questionnaire. The message will be sent about one month after the
collective intervention;
- For I: the questionnaire will be administered online with a phone message with a
link to the questionnaire. The message will be sent one month after the individual
intervention;
- For C: the questionnaire will be administered online with a phone message with a
link to the questionnaire. The message will be sent two months after the delivery.
- At T3: the questionnaire will be administered online with a phone message with a link to
the questionnaire. The message will be sent three months after the delivery (T3);
- At T4: the questionnaire will be administered online with a phone message with a link to
the questionnaire. The message will be sent six months after the delivery.
Questionnaire
The online questionnaire will be used to obtain socio-demographic data, characteristics of
breastfeeding practice, mother's confidence about their ability to successfully raise
children, and the information on stress and depression.
In order to find the measurements of stress level, self-efficacy and depression in the
mothers, a literature search on Pubmed using following search terms "maternal stress,
depression, self-efficacy AND (questionnaire or index or inventory)" was conducted on 25th
March 2019.
The search display 53 papers, after an analysis of the abstract and the full text the
researchers have composed a questionnaire that includes the following three validated scales:
- the Karitane Parenting Confidence Scale (KPCS) as a measure of the perceived parental
self-efficacy (PPSE), defined as ''beliefs or judgments a parent holds of their
capabilities to organize and execute a set of tasks related to parenting a child''. The
15-item scale, grounded in self-efficacy theory, was developed to assess PPSE of parents
with infants aged 0-12 months. Factor analysis revealed a three-factor structure,
composed of efficacy, support, and child development. An Italian version of the
questionnaire will be used.
- the Parental Stress Scale (PSS). The PSS scale consisted of 18 items rated on a 5-point
Likert scale. The total score was obtained by summing up the value for each item. A
higher score indicates a higher level of parental stress. An Italian version of the
questionnaire will be used.
- the Italian version of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS). This
questionnaire is used to measure maternal depressive symptoms. The EPDS is a self-report
screening measure to detect symptoms of postpartum depression. Scores >12 on the EPDS
are correlated with a diagnosis of major depressive disorder (MDD).
At the baseline, the questionnaire includes additionally a section of demographic variables.
The following characteristics will be collected: age, civil status (single or not),
employment (student/ worker/ no worker), educational level (middle school/ high school/
university), the birth date, primipara (yes/ no), number of children living at home and age,
vaginal birth (yes/no), Italian Region where she lives, city where she lives, ethnicity.
The women will be interviewed four times, always by phone call:
For G and I groups: About 2/3 weeks after the last women recruited and 2/3 days before the
intervention (T1); about two month after the delivery that it is about one month after the
intervetion(T2); three months after the delivery (T3); six months after the delivery (T4).
For the C group: About 2/3 weeks after the delivery(T1); about 30 days after delivery(T2);
three months after the delivery (T3); six months after the delivery (T4).
HAPPY MAMA Intervention
Collective level (G)
The training carried out by a childcare worker and midwives with high experience in childcare
and home interventions, includes educational and mindfulness training and simulations of
typical events. Given the importance of communication skills training and better outcomes in
studies where skills practice has taken place, the interventionists developed their skills
through patient simulation and role-play scenarios with one another and the facilitators
before interacting with study participants.
The phases of the intervention can be educational and support-based, as needed. The
educational phase aims to provide information, demonstrations, and discussions.
1. Objectives The objective of the HAPPY MAMA intervention is to explore the effects of
early proactive parenting support strategies on mothers' confidence, stress, and mood.
The ultimate goal is to share and increase awareness of one's abilities: control and
autonomy are important for the final step of the process, the last step wants to put new
mothers in a position to implement strategies, and be able to pursue goals to restore
mental well-being
2. Structure
The phases of the intervention can be educational and support-based, as needed. The
educational phase aims to provide information, demonstrations, and discussions while
supporting phase aimed at providing social support, counseling, or consultation. The
intervention follows several steps:
1. Listening and establishing relationship phases. The first step is characterized by
listening and understanding the critical points from the new mother.
This requires the use of listening skills, empathy, authenticity, and acceptance. The
operator maintains a nonjudgmental approach and allows the woman to determine the need
for behavioral change, rather than offering unsolicited advice on the need for change.
2. Analysis of the problems The situation must be carefully evaluated, considering the
discomfort and emotional distress. The stress situation will be described in a
subjective way, from the new mother/s, and she/they will assign a grade of discomfort
for each problem.
3. Assessment. The operator will carry out a multidimensional evaluation of the mother/s
within the dyad. The operator will evaluate the strategies implemented by the new
mother/s to face problems and the reasons of their failures; for example: how she
routinely handles organizational problems, how she experiences breastfeeding if there is
a lack of sleep and how she considers her family and support network.
The evaluation will have to consider the environment as a whole, with attention to
facilitators and barriers.
4. Definition of the problem and the goal of the intervention The problems detected by the
operator will be explained and summarized to the participant/s. The operator only
explores ways to implement change once the woman/women expresses the desire and
confidence to change.
The shared identification of the mother/s' priority will lead to the definition of a tailored
plan aimed at achieving specific goals such as the reduction of the stress levels, the
decline of the sleep deprivation (hours of sleep per night), optimization of breastfeeding
(number, duration and quality), increased well-being (mental health, physical health).
Strategies of concrete action and planned behavior will be provided adapted to the context
and styles of women/woman's coping.
Time Length of the intervention will be 3 hours in one day.
Location and number of partecipans Group interventions will take place at the Department of
Public Health and Infectious Diseases of "Sapienza" University of Rome. Number of
participants: 20 (max).
Individual interventions will be carried out at the women's home.
Descriptive statistics will be performed using frequencies and percentage for qualitative
variables. Moreover the measures of central tendency (mean or median) and of variability
(Standard Deviation, SD, interquartile range, IQR) will be computed in order to describe the
quantitative variables in each groups.
The univariate analysis will be used to compare groups (G, I and C) versus primary and
secondary outcomes. In particular, Kruskall Wallis's test will be applied to assess possible
difference of stress scores between the three groups; Chi-square's test will be applied to
assess possible independence between the three groups versus categorical variables, too.
The tests for paired samples will be used to assess the possible changes of the stress score
during the follow-up of the G and I groups (baseline, T1, versus 2(T2), 3 (T3) and 6
(T4)months after the intervention).
A linear regression model will be used in order to assess possible significant predictors of
the outcomes and a R2 will be computed as the indicator of the goodness of fit of the model.
The significant level is fit at p<0.05.
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