Social Media-Based Parenting Program for Women With Postpartum Depressive Symptoms
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Postpartum Depression
- Sponsor
- Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- Enrollment
- 95
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- Changes in parent-child interactions
- Status
- Completed
- Last Updated
- 9 months ago
Overview
Brief Summary
The long-term goal is to develop effective parenting strategies to facilitate optimal child development for mothers suffering with PPD symptoms. The overall objective for this application is to study whether this program combined with online depression treatment leads to more responsive parenting (target) and signals improved child language, socioemotional and cognitive development (outcomes) compared to depression treatment alone. Findings from this application can be used to inform a future study to test the effectiveness and implementation of this social media-based parenting program.
Detailed Description
Postpartum depression (PPD) symptoms are common among women following the birth of a child and can adversely impact a mother's ability to care for her child. As a result, infants of mothers with PPD symptoms may experience less responsive parenting, placing them at greater risk for delays in development. Evidence- based parenting programs have been developed to guide mothers with caring for their infants but may not address the impact of depression on parenting, are intensive and expensive to administer with limited ability for scale up, or are not available in a format that facilitates participation by women with depressive symptoms. To address these barriers, investigators developed a theoretically-driven social media-based parenting program on responsive parenting and child development. To determine whether the social media-based parenting program can improve responsive parenting and signal greater child development among women with PPD symptoms, investigators will conduct a prospective individually randomized group treatment trial. 113 eligible women who screen positive for PPD at their infants' well child visit and their children will be consented, enrolled, and randomized as mother-child dyads 1:1 to receive a) the social media-based parenting program plus online depression treatment or b) online depression treatment alone. Investigators chose a randomized design, because it is most effective in guarding against bias and will ensure that patients in both arms are similar in observed and unobserved characteristics. Treatment assignment will be done at the time of enrollment following informed consent. Descriptive statistics for demographic and poverty characteristics and PPD symptoms measured at baseline will be examined across the two treatment groups to assess the success of the randomization. Investigators will assess responsive parenting at baseline and 3 months post-enrollment. Secondary endpoints which include the changes in EPDS, PSOC, and PSI-SF scores measured between baseline and the 3-month follow-up between groups, will be explored to determine if the effects of the parenting program are consistent with preliminary study findings. The secondary child developmental outcomes will include differences in the Bayley-3 cognitive, language, and motor subscale scores at the 12-month follow-up visit. The intervention arm will also be assessed with the Therapeutic Factors Inventory-8 (TFI-8) to measure cohesion and the Acceptability survey which measures feasibility of the parenting program at 3-months post-enrollment. Additionally, at the 3-month mark, all participants will be administered the MoodGym Acceptability Survey to assess feasibility of the online depression treatment program. The results of this application would be expected to contribute important new knowledge and inform a future trial on parenting strategies to better assist mothers with PPD symptoms and improve child developmental outcomes.
Investigators
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Are \>18 years old
- •Screen positive for postpartum depression (score\>9) on the EPDS at a -participating pediatric practice
- •Have an infant \<8 months of age
- •Speak and Read English
- •Have Access to a smart phone or computer tablet with internet access
- •Children who:
- •Are \< 8 months old
Exclusion Criteria
- •Report suicidality (i.e., suicidal ideation and/or behavior) on the EPDS (Question #10) at enrollment.
- •Report severe depressive symptoms (EPDS\>20) at enrollment.
- •Have a substantiated report of child maltreatment
- •Children who:
- •Were born premature (estimated gestational age\<35 weeks)
- •Have been diagnosed with congenital malformations or genetic syndromes which place them at risk of developmental delays
- •Are already currently receiving early intervention services for developmental delays at baseline
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Changes in parent-child interactions
Time Frame: Baseline and 3-months
The Parent Child Early Relational Assessment (PCERA) will be used to assess parent-child interactions. The PCERA is a validated 65-item videotape assessment designed to measure the quality of affect and behavior in parent-infant interactions. The PCERA uses ratings that are based on observations of 5-minute videotaped interactions with parent-infant dyads engaged in free play. The PCERA contains 8 subscales of which 3 parenting subscales will be the focus: 1) Parental Positive Affective Involvement and Verbalization, 2) Parental Negative Affect and Behavior, and 3) Parental Intrusiveness, Insensitivity, and Inconsistency. Each individual subscale is scored between 0-5, with higher scores indicating more responsive parenting. A subscale score of 1-2 indicates an area of concern, a score of 3 indicates some concern, and a score of 4-5 in
Secondary Outcomes
- Changes in parenting stress(Baseline and 3-months)
- Acceptability of the online depression treatment program(3-months)
- Changes in severity of depressive symptoms(Monthly (Baseline to 12-months))
- Social support(Baseline)
- Changes in parenting competence(Baseline and 3-months)
- Acceptability of the parenting program(3-months)
- Prior mental health service use(Monthly (Baseline to 12-months))
- Therapy group cohesion(3-months)
- Child Development(12-months)