At a glance
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Preventing Postpartum Depression: A Dyadic Approach Adjunctive to Obstetric Care
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Practical Resources for Effective Postpartum Parenting (PREPP) and Enhanced Treatment As Usual (ETAU) for Postpartum Depression (PPD). Completed, enrolled 216 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The primary aim of this study is to determine if a behavioral intervention targeting maternal caregiving of young infants can increase infant sleep and reduce fuss/cry behavior, and thereby (1) reduce the incidence and/or severity of postpartum maternal depression and (2) improve the quality of the mother-infant interaction and subsequent child development. Specifically, the study team will investigate: (1) the effectiveness of the intervention compared to usual care; (2) if the effects of the intervention can be detected in the assessments of the quality of mother-infant interaction; (3) if there are prenatal and/or postnatal biomarkers that can help identify infants whose behavior is more likely to play a role in their mothers' depression; (4) if these markers differentiate which infants will be most responsive to the intervention(s); and (5), if assessments of brain function at birth and at 4-6 weeks of age provide biological nodal points for identifying the effects of the intervention on infant brain development. Participants will be recruited during their 2nd trimester, and will be randomly separated into one of two groups: a group that receives coaching in parenting techniques 3 coaching sessions and 2 check-in sessions or one that receives treatment as usual.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
A preventive psychotherapy intervention for PPD: Participants in this arm of the study receive PREPP (Practical Resources for Effective Postpartum Parenting). PREPP is a brief preventive intervention for Postpartum Depression that focuses on the birthing parent-infant dyad and consists of 5 sessions that take place during pregnancy through 6 weeks postpartum carried out by study clinicians referred to as 'coaches.' The sessions of this preventive psychotherapy are comprised of three components: (a) mindfulness and self-reflection skills, (b) parenting skills and (c) psycho-education.
Psychoeducation, Clinical Assessment, Potential Referral: Participants receive "usual care" along with Postpartum Depression psychoeducation and enhanced support for finding perinatal mental healthcare treatment when appropriate by meeting with a study clinician specifically assigned to provide ETAU in this study at three times that are aligned with PREPP sessions that span from pregnancy to 6 weeks postpartum. At the first contact, participants meet with their assigned ETAU clinician and are given information about PPD, a brief clinical mental health assessment, and a referral for treatment if warranted or requested; the second session is a follow-up mental health clinical assessment with the study clinician and a referral for treatment if warranted or requested; at the third session, participants meet again with their study clinician and receive a mental health assessment, review relevant psychoeducation on PPD and are referred to treatment when appropriate.