The impact of telemental health interventions on maternal mental health outcomes: a pilot randomized controlled trial during the COVID-19 pandemic.

IF 2.4 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1080/21642850.2022.2155167
Sarah Naja, Rowaida Elyamani, Mohamad Chehab, Mohamed Ali Siddig Ahmed, Ghidaa Babeker, Ghinwa Lawand, Rajvir Singh, Nada Adli, Tagreed Mohamad, Iheb Bougmiza
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Abstract

Background: The lethal potential of COVID-19 was often emphasized and repeatedly brought to the attention of pregnant women, leading to a higher level of anxiety, depression, and COVID-19-specific phobia among this population. Furthermore, legislation forced social distancing and isolation to interrupt the infection cycle. Together these factors resulted in higher maternal mental health distress requiring intervention. Nevertheless, there is a lack of evidence regarding the impact of low-intensity psychosocial telemental interventions on maternal mental health outcomes. Therefore, the objective of this pilot study is to assess the efficacy of video low-intensity psychosocial telemental maternal intervention on COVID-19-specific phobia, antenatal depression, and anxiety among pregnant women. We hypothesized that the intervention arm would be superior to the control arm. A parallel design randomized interventional controlled trial with 1:1 randomization was conducted at the Women Wellness and Research Center. We enrolled fifty-eight pregnant women in their second trimester who spoke English or Arabic. We assessed antenatal anxiety, depression, and Covid-19-specific phobia at baseline (T0), and thirty-three pregnant women completed the follow-up after four weeks (T1). Pregnant women receiving psychotropic medications and follow up in mental health services were excluded.

Results: A low-intensity psychosocial telemental maternal session helps reduce antenatal anxiety. We found statistically significant differences in antenatal anxiety scores between the intervention (2.4 ± 2.2) and control (4.2 ± 1.6) groups (p = 0.013) with a large effect size of Hedges' g value (0.96, 0.22-1.74). The absolute risk reduction was 27.27 percent. However, the intervention had no statistically significant effect on reducing antenatal depression or COVID-19-specific phobia.

Conclusions: Low-intensity psychosocial telemental maternal sessions effectively reduce antenatal anxiety. While our findings are promising, further RCTs are needed to replicate these findings.

Trial registration: 2a-ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT04594525.. Registered on 20/October/2020; updated 9/March/ 2022. Available from: Maternal Telemental Health Interventions in Response to Covid-19* - Full Text View - ClinicalTrials.gov.

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远程心理健康干预对孕产妇心理健康结果的影响:2019冠状病毒病大流行期间的一项随机对照试验
背景:COVID-19的致命潜力经常被强调并反复引起孕妇的注意,导致这一人群的焦虑、抑郁和COVID-19特异性恐惧症水平更高。此外,立法迫使社会保持距离和隔离,以中断感染周期。这些因素加在一起,导致需要干预的产妇心理健康压力增加。然而,关于低强度心理社会远程心理干预对产妇心理健康结果的影响,缺乏证据。因此,本试点研究的目的是评估视频低强度心理社会远程干预对孕妇covid -19特异性恐惧症、产前抑郁和焦虑的疗效。我们假设干预组将优于对照组。在妇女健康与研究中心进行了1:1随机化的平行设计随机介入对照试验。我们招募了58名妊娠中期会说英语或阿拉伯语的孕妇。我们在基线(T0)时评估了产前焦虑、抑郁和covid -19特异性恐惧症,33名孕妇在四周后(T1)完成了随访。接受精神药物治疗并在精神卫生服务机构接受随访的孕妇被排除在外。结果:低强度的心理心理远程产妇会话有助于减少产前焦虑。干预组(2.4±2.2)与对照组(4.2±1.6)的产前焦虑评分差异有统计学意义(p = 0.013), Hedges' g值效应量较大(0.96,0.22-1.74)。绝对风险降低了27.27%。然而,干预在减少产前抑郁或covid -19特异性恐惧症方面没有统计学意义。结论:低强度的心理心理远程治疗可有效降低产前焦虑。虽然我们的发现很有希望,但需要进一步的随机对照试验来复制这些发现。试验注册:2a-ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT04594525。2020年10月20日注册;2022年3月9日更新。可从:应对Covid-19的孕产妇远程心理健康干预* -全文视图- ClinicalTrials.gov。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
3.70%
发文量
57
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine: an Open Access Journal (HPBM) publishes theoretical and empirical contributions on all aspects of research and practice into psychosocial, behavioral and biomedical aspects of health. HPBM publishes international, interdisciplinary research with diverse methodological approaches on: Assessment and diagnosis Narratives, experiences and discourses of health and illness Treatment processes and recovery Health cognitions and behaviors at population and individual levels Psychosocial an behavioral prevention interventions Psychosocial determinants and consequences of behavior Social and cultural contexts of health and illness, health disparities Health, illness and medicine Application of advanced information and communication technology.
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