Helen Bourke-Taylor, PhD, is Associate Professor, Department of Occupational Therapy, School of Primary and Allied Health Care, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University, Peninsula Campus, Frankston, Victoria, Australia;
Monica Leo, BAppScOT, is Research Assistant, Department of Occupational Therapy, School of Primary and Allied Health Care, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University, Peninsula Campus, Frankston, Victoria, Australia.
Am J Occup Ther. 2023 May 1;77(3). doi: 10.5014/ajot.2023.050116.
Mothers of children with disabilities experience health disparity. Interventions targeting maternal mental health need to be developed.
To determine the feasibility and preliminary effectiveness of the Healthy Mothers Healthy Families-Health Promoting Activities Coaching (HMHF-HPAC) intervention for mothers to improve participation in healthy activities and mental health and to evaluate outcome measures.
Nonrandomized controlled pilot feasibility study with one group who received HMHF-HPAC and a control group.
Pediatric occupational therapy service; on site or telehealth.
Twenty-three mothers completed prequestionnaires; of those, 11 mothers participated in the intervention, and 5 did not (7 withdrew).
Eleven pediatric occupational therapists were trained to deliver six 10-min sessions of HMHF-HPAC to mothers, integrated into their child's therapy session or separately via telehealth.
Mixed-design analysis of variance explored changes in scores on the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale-21 Items and the Health Promoting Activities Scale.
The intervention group reported, on average, significant reductions in depressive symptoms and stress symptoms and significant increases in participation in health-promoting activity. No significant main effect of time was found for these variables in the control group.
The HMHF-HPAC program is a viable occupational therapy coaching intervention that can be embedded in existing services for families of children with disabilities. Future trials that evaluate the effectiveness of the HMHF-HPAC intervention for mothers of children with disabilities are warranted. What This Article Adds: This article provides support for the feasibility of appropriate and sensitive outcome measures and program content and delivery to implement the novel HMHF-HPAC intervention in further research. Mothers of children with disabilities benefited from integrated HMHF-HPAC delivered by pediatric occupational therapists within the family's existing services.
残疾儿童的母亲经历着健康差距。需要开发针对产妇心理健康的干预措施。
确定 Healthy Mothers Healthy Families-Health Promoting Activities Coaching(HMHF-HPAC)干预措施对母亲改善健康活动参与度和心理健康的可行性和初步效果,并评估结果衡量标准。
一项非随机对照试点可行性研究,一组接受 HMHF-HPAC 干预,一组为对照组。
儿科职业治疗服务;现场或远程医疗。
23 位母亲完成了预调查问卷;其中 11 位母亲参与了干预,5 位母亲(7 位退出)没有参与。
11 位儿科职业治疗师接受了培训,为母亲提供六次 10 分钟的 HMHF-HPAC 课程,整合到他们孩子的治疗课程中或通过远程医疗单独进行。
混合设计方差分析探讨了 Depression Anxiety Stress Scale-21 Items(DASS-21)和 Health Promoting Activities Scale(HPAS)得分的变化。
干预组报告称,抑郁症状和压力症状平均显著减轻,参与健康促进活动的比例显著增加。对照组在这些变量上没有发现时间的显著主要影响。
HMHF-HPAC 计划是一种可行的职业治疗辅导干预措施,可以嵌入到残疾儿童家庭的现有服务中。未来的试验评估 HMHF-HPAC 干预对残疾儿童母亲的有效性是必要的。这篇文章的重要性:这篇文章提供了支持,表明适当和敏感的结果衡量标准以及方案内容和交付是可行的,可以在进一步的研究中实施新颖的 HMHF-HPAC 干预措施。残疾儿童的母亲从儿科职业治疗师在家庭现有服务中提供的集成 HMHF-HPAC 中受益。