View clinical trials related to Depression, Postpartum.
Filter by:A short term dyadic psychotherapy intervention for mothers with Post-Partum depression and their babies in the first year of life was developed. The investigators believe that following dyadic intervention mothers will show improvement in depressive symptoms, the quality of the mother-child relationship will improve, and maternal and infant's oxytocin levels will rise.
This intervention study aims to evaluate the effectivity of web-based cognitive therapy in reducing depression and anxiety in pregnant and postpartum women. Moreover, it aims to assess treatment feasibility and usability of the treatment in the same population. After an initial screening to determine the eligibility to participate, all participants fulfilling the inclusion criteria will receive their personal access login in order to start the intervention.
Is Behavioural Activation feasible, acceptable and potentially effective for mothers experiencing post natal depression in Blackpool? Phase 1: A series of single case studies which aim to examine and refine a) the appropriateness of the programme to women in Blackpool b) the suitability of BA as part of a stepped-care approach to perinatal mental health within the Health Visitor pathway and c) the delivery of the programme in practice. Phase 2: A preliminary single group study examining the quantitative outcomes for participating women (i.e. symptoms of depression, anxiety and general mood, parental stress, responsiveness, and behavioural avoidance and activation.
It is well documented that the formation of the early relation between parents and infant has a significant impact on the child's mental, social and cognitive development and competencies. The early relationship formation in the first year in the infants' life gets the best conditions when parents are able to interpret, understand and respond to the infants signal adequately. Symptoms of mental illness can affect a person's ability to respond to their environment and thereby their parenting capabilities. Research have found that parental psychopathology may interfere with a healthy interaction with the infant by reducing the ability to be sensitively attuned and responsive to the infant's signal, needs and cues due to the nature of the psychiatric symptoms. The aim of this study is to investigate what potential lies within the postpartum stay at the obstetric department and in the transition to the primary health care sector for vulnerable families and to develop an intervention that will help increase the parents sensitivity towards their new born infant in order to enter a healthy early relationship formation which will be measureable on short term in the prevalence of maternal post-partum depression. The study is a prospective mixed-method study consisting of three sub-studies. The first study is a register-based study which aims to investigate how the proportion and the absolute risk of children with predefined adverse developmental outcomes is distributed between families defined as level three or four compared to families defined as level one and two. The second study aims to uncover needs and preferences of the vulnerable families and to investigate the experiences of the health care professionals. It is explored by in-depth family interviews with families discharged from the obstetric department and focus group interviews with health care professionals (nurses and health visitors) who are responsible for the care delivered to vulnerable families. Subsequently an intervention study will be developed, adapted, implemented and evaluated. The intervention will be carried out at the obstetric department at Hvidovre hospital and in transition to the primary healthcare sector using components from family focused nursing (FFN) and neonatal behavioral observational sessions (NBO) in addition to what have appeared in the two first sub-studies. The aim of the intervention is to facilitate family consciousness of their resources'' and increase parental sensitivity in order to foster the best possible prerequisites for a healthy early relationship formation between parent and infant. The study population consists of mothers with anxiety or depression diagnosis giving birth at Hvidovre hospital. The register-based study will provide population based information on the characteristics of vulnerable families focusing on the adverse outcomes for the children. The qualitative interviews will contribute with in-depth knowledge about preferences and experiences in relation to the care offered within the extended stay at the obstetric department and in the transition to primary health care sector and everyday life for vulnerable families. The enactment, implementation and evaluation of the intervention will determine whether the combination of FFN, NBO and improved collaboration between the obstetric department and the health visitor is associated with increased family function and increased parental sensitivity among parents in the intervention group compared to the control group. Effect from baseline (24-48 hours post-partum) to follow-up (3 months post-partum) will be measured on both the mother, the parents and the infant focusing on depression symptoms (primary outcome), parental stress, parental reflective function, mother-baby interaction, couple relationship satisfaction, infants' self-regulation, family function and breastfeeding Descriptive statistics will be applied in order to detect associations. Power calculations showed that with a significance level of 5% and a power of 80% 55 families are needed in the control and the intervention group, respectively, in order to detect statistically difference. This PhD study will contribute with a new perspective on the potential of the time immediately after birth and the potential effect of early intervention to improve prerequisites for increased family function and early healthy relationship formation for vulnerable families. The study will provide knowledge and experience about the practical application of both FFN and NBO at the obstetric department which have never been done in a Danish context before. It is expected that the study as a whole may impact and benefit clinical nursing as well a public health.
The aim is to develop, test and evaluate an educational intervention with the purpose to strengthen Child Health Services (CHS) Nurses clinical competence in detecting signs of postpartum depression in non-native-speaking immigrant mothers. The pilot study has a pre-post experimental design. Data are collected before and after the intervention. The differences in the values of the collected data are used to estimate the effect of the intervention.
This is a randomized comparative effectiveness study of two forms of enhanced prenatal care among 657 Medi-Cal eligible pregnant individuals in Fresno, California. The goal is to see whether group prenatal care with wrap around services versus individual prenatal care supplemented by services covered by the California Department of Public Health Comprehensive Perinatal Services Program (CPSP) results in less depression and anxiety, and more respectful, more person-centered maternity care and lower rates of preterm birth.
The investigators pilot test a Nature Coach Intervention in a population of postpartum women, to increase the amount of time people spend outside in local nature, with the goal of preventing postpartum depression.
Background: Postpartum depression follows approximately 10-15% of deliveries. Maternal functional disability, particularly in the relationship with the infant, a hallmark of PPD, causes impairment in the mother's ability to bond with her infant. Subsequently, this impairment leads to deleterious long-term consequences for infant cognitive, neurological, and social-emotional growth, and is associated with psychiatric disorders in later life. Therefore, the development of effective short-term treatment in such a highly prevalent phenomenon is of a high clinical priority. While pharmacological and psychological treatments are effective in treating PPD , these interventions have failed to show a significant improvement in mother-child interaction quality and infant development. The Oxytocin System: Oxytocin (OXT) is a nine amino acid neuro-peptide, found exclusively in mammals and is released during labor and lactation. Among the central influences of OXT on human social behavior are increased trust, empathy and eye contact. Brain imaging found that maternal attachment activates regions in the brain's reward systems that are rich with oxytocin and vasopressin receptors . Such findings led researchers to speculate that OXT may be involved in linking and maintaining the connection between social recognition systems and feelings of pleasure . According to this speculation, pair bonding is a form of conditioned reward learning, whereby OXT promotes the reward in social encounters, thus enhancing the motivation to engage in such interaction . Disruptions to the oxytocin system in depression have been repeatedly observed, and woman suffering from PPD have lower plasma OXT concentrations in comparison to the control group . A recent small treatment study of OXT in women suffering from PPD did not show a positive effect on mood; however, it did show improved mother-child interactions. Studies suggest a bio-behavioral feedback loop of OXT, parenting, and infant social competence. Rationale and Hypotheses of the Current Research: We speculate that mothers suffering from PPD exhibit high levels of depression and low levels of OXT, hence experiencing the interaction with their child as less rewarding, which in turn promote further depressive symptoms and interfere with child development. The aims of this study are: 1. To assess the relationship between levels of oxytocin in mothers suffering from postpartum depression and their babies, before and after psychological dyadic treatment compered to supportive treatment. 2. To study the added value of dyadic treatment over conventional supportive treatment for PPD that does not focus specifically on the mother's relationship with her baby. 3. To show the effects of dyadic treatment for PPD mothers and their children on the child's emotional and behavioral development. Methods: Subjects: 50 Mothers will be interviewed and diagnosed as suffering from PPD according to DSM-IV-TR, will be enrolled within 2-8 months postpartum.
We will aim to study the impact of introducing a smartphone-based daily feedback and communication platform between postpartum women delivering at our institute and a multidisciplinary breastfeeding-support team (obstetricians, neonatologists, midwives, lactation consultants, nurses, and psychologist) on breastfeeding rates.
This trail aims to evaluate the effects of a cooperative education program based on precede-proceed model during pregnancy on preventing postpartum depression in southern Razavi Khorasan Province.