Parent-Infant Research Institute, Heidelberg Repatriation Hospital, Heidelberg Heights, VIC, 3081, Australia.
Department of Psychology, College of Health Care Science, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia.
BMC Psychiatry. 2022 Jul 16;22(1):476. doi: 10.1186/s12888-022-04111-x.
Depression in pregnancy is prevalent, under-treated, and has serious impacts on the wellbeing of women and on child development. Internet programs can reach women who may not access traditional treatments due to distance, stigma or concern about taking medication. We adapted our online postnatal depression program, MumMoodBooster, for antenatal use. We aimed to trial feasibility, acceptability, and potential efficacy of the new Mum2BMoodBooster intervention with depressed pregnant women.
Twenty-seven pregnant women with Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale score > 11 used the program in a feasibility trial. Twenty-one had current diagnoses of major or minor depression on the Structured Clinical Interview for the DSM-IV. Assessment of symptoms occurred at screening/baseline, post-test (8 weeks post-enrollment), and at follow-up (3 months postpartum) using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS-21).
In this feasibility trial, depression scores on both the PHQ-9 and the DASS-21, showed significant reductions representing large effects, with average symptom scores reduced by > 50%, and maintained in the 'minimal or no depression' range at 3 month follow-up. Anxiety scores also decreased significantly. Program usage was high with 74% of women visiting all six sessions. Program acceptability ratings were moderate to high.
Findings paralleled the magnitude of symptom reductions seen in randomised trials of the postnatal MumMoodBooster program, suggesting that Mum2BMoodBooster is an effective treatment for depressed pregnant women. Effective internet therapies are likely to become increasingly important as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to make face-to-face access to health care problematic during 'lockdowns'.
孕期抑郁症较为普遍,治疗不足,对女性健康和儿童发育都有严重影响。互联网项目可以接触到因距离、耻辱感或对药物治疗的担忧而无法接受传统治疗的女性。我们改编了我们的在线产后抑郁症项目,MumMoodBooster,用于产前使用。我们旨在试用新的 Mum2BMoodBooster 干预措施对患有抑郁症的孕妇的可行性、可接受性和潜在疗效。
27 名 Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale 评分 > 11 的孕妇参加了一项可行性试验。21 名孕妇目前患有 DSM-IV 结构临床访谈的重度或轻度抑郁症。使用患者健康问卷 (PHQ-9) 和抑郁焦虑应激量表 (DASS-21) 在筛查/基线、后测(入组后 8 周)和随访(产后 3 个月)进行症状评估。
在这项可行性试验中,PHQ-9 和 DASS-21 的抑郁评分均显著降低,代表着大的影响,平均症状评分降低了 > 50%,并在 3 个月随访时保持在“轻度或无抑郁”范围内。焦虑评分也显著下降。程序使用率很高,74%的女性访问了所有六次课程。对程序的接受度评价为中等偏高。
这些发现与随机试验中产后 MumMoodBooster 程序的症状减轻程度相吻合,表明 Mum2BMoodBooster 是一种有效的治疗方法。随着 COVID-19 大流行继续使“封锁”期间面对面获得医疗保健成为问题,有效的互联网治疗方法可能变得越来越重要。