View clinical trials related to Postpartum Depression.
Filter by:Postpartum depression is a very common and costly illness with numerous, long-term deleterious effects for women, their offspring and families; yet most women are not treated. Group IPT delivered virtually offers women a 1st-line, low-cost intervention that overcomes existing treatment barriers. To test its acceptability and effectiveness, a RCT will be conducted to compare virtually delivered group IPT immediately to usual care in women in Ontario Canada who have postpartum depression.
The purpose of the present randomized controlled study is to investigate if there is a difference in postpartum depression symptoms among participants assigned to : 1. an automated conversational agent based on the most researched and scientifically validated psychotherapies, primarily Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), and accessible via an iOS and Android application, or to 2. a comparison condition without CBT and conversation, though still delivered in an interactive smartphone application that is accessible anytime of day.
Postpartum depression (PPD) represent around 15% of birth in developed countries. The context of the COVID-19 epidemy represents a possible source of additional emotional distress. The objective of this study is to determine the screening prevalence and risk factors of postpartum depression, among women who deliver in fourth hospital in the North of France in the context of the COVID epidemy.
Postpartum depression (PPD) already affects up to 1 in 5 women and left untreated costs $150,000 per case over the lifespan. Under normal conditions, just 10% of women with PPD get evidence-based treatment, a situation that has worsened substantially during COVID-19. The purpose of this study is to a assess if self-referred, online adaptation of a 1-Day Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)-Based Workshop for PPD delivered up to 30 women at a time can lead to reductions in PPD, if the workshops are cost-effective, and to assess workshop impact on common complications of PPD (anxiety, partner relationship discord, problems with mother-infant attachment). 388 women will be randomized to receive either immediate treatment or treatment 12 weeks later (waitlist control). Study measures will be collected at baseline (immediately before treatment workshop) and 12 weeks later (immediately before wait list control workshop).
Qatar Mothers and Babies is a 4-year collaboration between Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and Sidra Medicine in Doha, Qatar that will generate and evaluate a cultural and contextual adaptation of the Mothers and Babies intervention for pregnant Arabic-speaking women in Qatar. The study will examine the feasibility and acceptability of the adapted intervention as well as its effectiveness in improving mental health outcomes among pregnant women receiving prenatal care at Sidra Medicine in Doha. Additionally, given the high prevalence of diabetes among this study population, the investigators are also interested in seeing if the Mothers and Babies interventions helps improve the management of this disease. Funded by the Qatar National Research Fund's National Priorities Research Program (NPRP), this project has the potential to guide future cultural adaptations of Mothers and Babies as well as other evidence-based interventions, and the delivery of Mothers and Babies to Arab and Arab-American women.
Be a mom program (a web-based cognitive-behavioral intervention) is being tested in another clinical trial as a preventive intervention for postpartum depression (NCT03024645). However, given its effectiveness in reducing depressive symptoms among women presenting early-onset postpartum depressive symptoms, Be a Mom can also have potential as a postpartum depression complement treatment tool. The main goal of this research is to apply and evaluate the acceptability and effectiveness of a blended cognitive-behavioral intervention for the treatment of postpartum depression (Be a Mom Coping with Depression) by integrating face-to-face sessions with the web-based program Be a Mom. The RCT will be a two-arm trial. Women who have had a child during the prior 12 months will be enrolled in the study. A minimum number of 110 women will be enrolled in the study. After agreeing to participate in the study, women will be screened and evaluated for the presence of clinically significant depressive symptoms (according to DSM-5) by a researcher (licensed psychologist). Participants who meet the eligibility criteria will be randomly assigned to one of the conditions: the blended intervention (Be a Mom Coping with Depression) or the control condition (online intervention - Be a Mom). The sample will be recruited online. Participation in this study will last 6 months. The blended intervention will last about 3 months. Participants in both conditions will be invited by the researchers via email to complete baseline, post-intervention and follow-up (3-months post-intervention) assessments. Assessments will include self-report questionnaires to assess several indicators (e.g., depressive and anxiety symptoms, quality of life, marital satisfaction, mother-child bonding, and maternal self-efficacy), mechanisms that may be involved in the treatment response (e.g., psychological flexibility, emotional regulation, and self-compassion) and user's acceptability and satisfaction.
The aim of this multicenter prospective study is to evaluate the association between the Covid-19 pandemic maternal psychological distress with the postpartum depression, demographic and anaesthesiologic variables
There are studies in the literature that associate oxytocin level with postpartum depression. This study was carried out to investigate the relationship between oxytocin levels measured during pregnancy and postpartum depression symptoms.
Prenatal depression is an important risk factor of postpartum depression. Low-dose ketamine has been used for depression treatment. As a stereoisomer of ketamine, s-ketamine has similar effects to ketamine in anti-depression. We speculate that, for pregnant women with prenatal depression, low-dose s-ketamine infusion after childbirth may reduce the incidence of postpartum depression.
The purpose of this study is to test whether a web-based (eHealth) exercise intervention for new moms at increased risk for postpartum depression increases physical activity and decreases postpartum depression symptoms.