Daley-McCoy Cathyrn, Rogers Maeve, Slade Pauline
Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service, South West Yorkshire NHS Trust, Beech House, Margaret Street, Wakefield, UK,
Arch Womens Ment Health. 2015 Oct;18(5):681-92. doi: 10.1007/s00737-015-0510-7. Epub 2015 Feb 10.
This randomised controlled trial examined the feasibility of enhancing relationship functioning in couples during the transition to parenthood through the development and delivery of a low-intensity antenatal intervention. The 2-h psycho-educational programme marks the first of its kind to be trialled in the UK and was delivered as an adjunct to existing antenatal classes provided through the National Health Service. A cluster randomised design was used as antenatal classes rather than participants were randomly allocated to either treatment condition. Feasibility was assessed on the basis of pragmatic delivery and acceptability of the intervention. Data from 47 participants who received the intervention and 36 participants who did not was then compared to provide a preliminary indication of its effectiveness. Outcomes were assessed in terms of relationship satisfaction, couple communication and psychological distress. The intervention appeared feasible in terms of pragmatic delivery, rates of uptake and attendance at sessions. Participant evaluation forms also indicated that people were reasonably satisfied with the intervention and would recommend it to friends. Three significant phases × condition interactions were indicated using mixed-methods analyses of variance (ANOVAs); women in the intervention condition reported significantly less deterioration in relationship satisfaction (F(1, 44) = 3.11; p = 0.021; eta(2) = 0.07), while men in the intervention condition reported significantly less deterioration in couple communication (F(1, 35) = 2.59; p = 0.029; eta(2) = 0.08) and significant improvement in their experience of psychological distress (adjusted z = 1.99; p = 0.023; Cohen's d = 0.47). These positive preliminary indicators lend support to future large-scale investigation.
这项随机对照试验通过开发和实施一项低强度产前干预措施,研究了在为人父母的过渡阶段改善夫妻关系功能的可行性。这个两小时的心理教育项目是英国首个此类试验项目,作为英国国家医疗服务体系提供的现有产前课程的补充。采用整群随机设计,因为是对产前课程而非参与者进行随机分配到治疗条件。根据干预措施的实际实施情况和可接受性来评估可行性。然后比较了47名接受干预的参与者和36名未接受干预的参与者的数据,以初步表明其有效性。从关系满意度、夫妻沟通和心理困扰方面评估结果。从实际实施、参与率和课程出勤率来看,干预措施似乎是可行的。参与者评估表也表明人们对干预措施相当满意,并会向朋友推荐。使用混合方差分析(ANOVA)显示了三个显著的阶段×条件交互作用;接受干预的女性在关系满意度方面的恶化程度显著较低(F(1, 44) = 3.11;p = 0.021;eta(2) = 0.07),而接受干预的男性在夫妻沟通方面的恶化程度显著较低(F(1, 35) = 2.59;p = 0.029;eta(2) = 0.08),并且他们的心理困扰体验有显著改善(调整后的z = 1.99;p = 0.023;Cohen's d = 0.47)。这些积极的初步指标为未来的大规模调查提供了支持。