Centre for Health Service Development, Australian Health Services Research Institute, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia.
Perinatal & Women's Mental Health Unit, St John of God Burwood Hospital & School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Burwood, Australia.
J Med Internet Res. 2021 Mar 26;23(3):e18517. doi: 10.2196/18517.
Mummatters is a web-based health tool that allows women to self-assess the symptoms of depression and the presence of psychosocial risk factors throughout pregnancy and the postnatal period. It aims to increase women's awareness of their own symptoms or risk factors and their knowledge of the available support options, to encourage engagement with these support options (as appropriate), and to facilitate communication about emotional health issues between women and their health care providers.
The aim of this study is to report the uptake of mummatters; the sociodemographic and psychosocial risk profiles of a subsample of users; and the acceptability, credibility, perceived effect, and motivational appeal of the tool. The help-seeking behaviors of the subsample of users and barriers to help seeking were also examined.
Mummatters was launched in November 2016. Women who completed the mummatters baseline assessment were invited to complete a web-based follow-up survey 1 month later.
A total of 2817 women downloaded and used mummatters between November 13, 2016, and May 22, 2018, and 140 women participated in the follow-up study. Approximately half of these women (51%; 72/140) were Whooley positive (possible depression), and 43% (60/140) had an elevated psychosocial risk score on the Antenatal Risk Questionnaire. Mummatters was rated favorably by pregnant and postnatal women in terms of its acceptability (94%-99%), credibility (93%-97%), appeal (78%-91%), and potential to affect a range of health behaviors specific to supporting emotional wellness during the perinatal period (78%-93%). Whooley-positive women were more likely to speak with their families than with a health care provider about their emotional health. Normalizing symptoms and stigma were key barriers to seeking help.
Although mummatters was rated positively by consumers, only 53% (19/36) to 61% (22/36) of women with possible depression reported speaking to their health care providers about their emotional health. There was a trend for more prominent barriers to seeking help among postnatal women than among pregnant women. Future studies that investigate whether social barriers to seeking help are greater once a woman has an infant are warranted. Such barriers potentially place these women at greater risk of remaining untreated, as the demands on them are greater.
Mummatters 是一个基于网络的健康工具,允许女性在整个怀孕期间和产后自我评估抑郁症状和心理社会风险因素。其目的是提高女性对自身症状或风险因素的认识,以及对现有支持选择的了解,鼓励她们(酌情)参与这些支持选择,并促进女性与其医疗保健提供者之间关于情绪健康问题的沟通。
本研究旨在报告 Mummatters 的使用率;用户亚组的社会人口学和心理社会风险概况;以及该工具的可接受性、可信度、感知效果和激励吸引力。还检查了用户亚组的求助行为和求助障碍。
Mummatters 于 2016 年 11 月推出。完成 Mummatters 基线评估的女性被邀请在 1 个月后完成一项基于网络的随访调查。
2016 年 11 月 13 日至 2018 年 5 月 22 日期间,共有 2817 名女性下载并使用了 Mummatters,其中 140 名女性参加了随访研究。这些女性中有近一半(51%;72/140)是 Wholley 阳性(可能患有抑郁症),43%(60/140)在产前风险问卷上的心理社会风险评分较高。Mummatters 在接受度(94%-99%)、可信度(93%-97%)、吸引力(78%-91%)以及对一系列支持围产期情绪健康的特定健康行为的潜在影响(78%-93%)方面得到了孕妇和产后女性的好评。Wholley 阳性的女性更有可能与家人而不是医疗保健提供者谈论她们的情绪健康。症状正常化和污名化是寻求帮助的主要障碍。
尽管 Mummatters 受到了消费者的好评,但只有 53%(19/36)至 61%(22/36)的可能患有抑郁症的女性报告与医疗保健提供者谈论过她们的情绪健康。产后女性寻求帮助的障碍比怀孕女性更为明显。需要进一步研究,以调查一旦女性有了婴儿,寻求帮助的社会障碍是否更大。这些障碍可能使这些女性面临更大的未得到治疗的风险,因为她们的需求更大。