| Literature DB >> 25995650 |
Rebecca Gillham1, Anja Wittkowski2.
Abstract
Mother and baby units (MBUs) provide inpatient psychiatric care for mothers and their infants up to a year after childbirth. They are commissioned to support the mother-infant relationship as well as stabilize maternal mental health. As their efficacy at meeting these aims had not previously been systematically assessed, this paper reviewed the international literature relating to psychological outcomes following MBU admission. A systematic search of five databases identified 23 papers eligible for inclusion, reporting on a range of outcomes indicating positive effects on maternal mental health and the mother-infant relationship and an absence of adverse effects on child development. The review also highlighted specific groups responding less favorably to MBU admission, eg, mothers with a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Although the included studies were of variable methodological quality, the research findings consistently indicated positive effects. Implications for research and clinical practice are outlined in the discussion.Entities:
Keywords: mother and baby unit; mothers; postnatal mental health; psychological outcomes; quality assessment; systematic review
Year: 2015 PMID: 25995650 PMCID: PMC4425328 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S69472
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Figure 1Flowchart demonstrating literature-review procedure.
Abbreviation: MBU, mother and baby unit.
Settings of studies included in review and reported demographic characteristics (in chronological order)
| Paper number | Author | Country | Unit size | Setting | Staff | Intervention | Maternal (M) and infant (I) age (years and weeks/months, respectively) | Education/occupation | Marital status | Primiparous | Ethnicity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Meltzer-Brody et al | USA | 5 beds No overnight facility for children | MBU | Nurses, lactation consultants, chaplain, recreational and occupational therapists, psychologists, psychiatrists, social worker, yoga instructor | Group and individual therapies: art, relaxation, behavioral, and mindfulness-based cognitive therapy, M-wave biofeedback therapy, mother–infant attachment therapy, family and partner-assisted interpersonal psychotherapy, therapeutic yoga, spiritual support | M: 28.8 years | 49% married 12% cohabiting 23% single 6% divorced/separated 1% widowed | 19% | 50% White 29% African-American 12% Hispanic 1% Asian American 10% other | |
| 2 | Reddy et al | India | MBU | M: | |||||||
| 3 | Vliegen et al | Belgium | 8 beds 4 beds | 2 MBUs | Psychiatrist, a child, and an adult psychologist–psychotherapist, psychomotor and creative therapist, social worker, nurses, child-care worker | Systemic, psychodynamic, and cognitive approaches to treat mother and mother–infant relationship | M: 29.39 years | 13.68 years of education | |||
| 4 | Kenny et al | UK | 13 beds | MBU | Psychiatrist, psychologist, nurses, OTs, social workers, nursery nurses | Medication, psychological therapies, video interaction work | M: 31.4 years MBU 30.6 years community ill 28.8 years healthy | Single: 20.4% MBU 20.9% community ill 19.0% healthy | 42.9% MBU 35.8% community ill 68.2% healthy | White: 58.2% MBU 43.3% community ill 54.5% healthy | |
| 5 | Bilszta et al | Australia | 2 MBUs | Psychiatrist, nurses | Practical baby-care sessions, group discussions, CBT, music therapy, art therapy, medication | M: | 92% married or cohabiting | 99% English language, 85% born in Australia | |||
| 6 | Glangeaud Freudenthal et al | France | 13 MBUs | M: 31 years | 29.5% training 11.7% unemployed 13.1% disability 17.2% sick leave 13.6% not in labor force 15% other 35.1% high school and over 46.5% secondary 17.8% primary or unknown | 65.5% cohabiting | 62.1% | Country of birth: 83.6% France 16.4% other | |||
| 7 | Bergink et al | Netherlands | 5 beds | MBU | Medication | M: 31.9 years | 52.9% postsecondary education | 96.1% married | 78.4% | 88.2% dutch ethnicity | |
| 8 | Pawlby et al | UK | 12 beds | MBU | Video interaction feedback | M: 34.6 years schizophrenia 32.2 years depression 29.0 years mania 30.5 years controls | Professional/managerial: 25% schizophrenia 40% depression 40% mania 31.7% control | Single: 53.3% schizophrenia 4.3% depression 41.7% mania 0 controls | 33.3% schizophrenia 43.5% depression 50% mania 56% controls | White: 20% schizophrenia 69.6% depression 50% mania 100% controls | |
| 9 | Vliegen et al | Belgium | 2 MBUs | M: 29.39 years | |||||||
| 10 | Noorlander et al | Netherlands | MBU | Medication, video intervention, feedback from nursing staff, therapy group | M: 32.16 years postpartum depression 31.73 years postpartum psychosis | Postpartum depression 23.1% primary 53.9% secondary 23.1% higher Postpartum psychosis 0% primary 58.3% secondary 41.7% higher | Married/cohabiting: 84.6% postpartum depression 100% postpartum psychosis | 53.8% postpartum depression 91.7% postpartum psychosis | |||
| 11 | Wan et al | UK | MBU | M: 28.93 years | 6 professional/managerial 4 skilled/manual 2 semiskilled/unskilled 3 unemployed 1 not classified | 87% married | |||||
| 12 | Wan et al | UK | MBU | M: 30.54 years schizophrenia 27.43 years bipolar disorder 27.45 years depression | Professional to skilled manual: 23% schizophrenia 57% bipolar disorder 27% depressive illness Educational qualification: 54% schizophrenia 29% bipolar disorder 55% depressive illness | Married/cohabiting: 39% schizophrenia 71% bipolar disorder 64% depressive illness | 69% schizophrenia 57% bipolar disorder 54% depressive illness | White: 62% schizophrenia 93% bipolar disorder 100% depressive illness | |||
| 13 | Abel et al | UK | 8 MBUs, 3 MBFs | M: schizophrenia 20% <20 years, 29% 25–29 years, 30% 30–34 years, 22% 35+ years Affective disorder 20% <20 years, 29% 25–29 years, 29% 30–34 years, 23% 35+ years | Schizophrenia: 28% professional/managerial 54% semiskilled/unskilled 18% never employed Affective disorder: 51% professional/managerial 40% semiskilled/unskilled 9% never employed | Married/cohabiting: 53% schizophrenia 76% affective disorder | 57% schizophrenia 56% affective disorder | Schizophrenia: 56% White 27% Black African or Caribbean 11% South Asian 6% other Affective disorder: 78% White 9% Black African or Caribbean 7% South Asian 6% other | |||
| 14 | Glangeaud Freudenthal | France and Belgium | 11 MBUs | M: 30 years | 29% professional 24% unemployed 22% student 14% disability 11% other | 76% living with partner | |||||
| 15 | Salmon et al | UK | 8 MBUs 3 MBFs | M: 26% 16–25 years 73% 26–50 years | 23% professional/managerial 18% skilled manual 42% semiskilled/unskilled 4% unclassified 7% unemployed | 68% married/cohabiting 5% separated/divorced 24% single 0.2% widowed 1% other | 11% Black African 6% Black Caribbean 8% Indian/Pakistani/Bangladeshi 1% Chinese 66% White 7% other | ||||
| 16 | Salmon et al | UK | 8 MBUs 3 MBFs | M: 26% 16–25 years 73% 26–50 years | 23% professional/managerial 18% skilled manual 42% semiskilled/unskilled 4% unclassified 7% unemployed | 68% married/cohabiting 5% separated/divorced 24% single 0.2% widowed 1% other | 11% Black African 6% Black Caribbean 8% Indian/Pakistani/Bangladeshi 1% Chinese 66% White 7% other | ||||
| 17 | Hipwell et al | UK | MBU | MDT | M: 29.5 years MBU 28.9 years control | Nonmanual: 60% MBU 63% control | Married/cohabiting: 80% MBU 88% control | MBU 64% Control 56% | |||
| 18 | Riordan et al | UK | MBU | M: 31.5 years schizophrenia | |||||||
| 19 | Snellen et al | UK | MBU | M: 28.6 years | 53% single 27% married 20% de facto | ||||||
| 20 | Milgrom et al | Australia | 6 beds, focus on mothers with psychosis | MBU | Consultant psychiatrist, psychiatric nurses, pediatrician, psychologist, maternal and child health nurse, social worker, occupational therapist, psychiatry registrar | Medication, nursing, mothering skills, baby play group, CBT, family/couples work, social skills training, relaxation, daily living skills | M: 28.8 years | 14% employed 25% home duties 61% unemployed and receiving benefits | 39% single 44% married 14% de facto 3% separated | 58% | |
| 21 | Hipwell and Kumar | UK | MBU | MDT | M: 29.7 years unipolar depression 28.2 years bipolar depression 26.8 years schizophrenia | Nonmanual: 68% unipolar depression 54% bipolar depression 27% schizophrenia | Married/cohabiting: 82% unipolar depression 77% bipolar depression 40% schizophrenia | 54% unipolar depression 69% bipolar depression 53% schizophrenia | |||
| 22 | Bardon et al | UK | 10 beds | MBU | Nurses | Medication, weekly group therapy, staff discussion, individual psychotherapy, OT | M: 28.3 years | 53% | |||
| 23 | Baker et al | UK | 8 beds, focus on mothers with psychosis | MBU | “Mentally trained nurses”, nursery nurses, psychiatrist, psychologist, social worker | ECT, chlorpromazine, atmosphere of emotional warmth and support | M: 26.6 years MBU 27.4 years control | 60% MBU 65% control |
Notes:
Information not provided;
external funding sources.
Abbreviations: MBU, mother and baby unit; OT, occupational therapist; CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy; MBF, mother and baby facility; MDT, multidisciplinary team; ECT, electroconvulsive therapy.
Designs and outcomes of included studies
| Paper number | Sample size | Diagnosis | Design | Measures | Outcomes | Quality rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 41 | Postpartum depression | Cohort | Maternal health: BDI, STAI, | Depression, anxiety, and state anger decreased, positive affect increased, and negative affect decreased | Good 67% |
| 2 | 74 | 100% major depressive disorder | Control | Maternal health: EPDS | Improvement in maternal health in all three groups | Good 62% |
| 3 | 25 | Postpartum depression (n=13) | Cohort | Maternal health: CGI | Maternal mental health improved | Good 64% |
| 4 | 15 | 53% depression | Cohort | Maternal health: BDI | 60% self-report current mental health needs and | Good 55% |
| 5 | 1,217 | 43% depressive illness | Cohort | Maternal health: | 43% symptom-free | Good 67% |
| 6 | 176 | 25% schizophrenia | Cohort | Maternal health: | 65% symptom-free or considerably improved | Moderate 45% |
| 7 | 1,081 | 38% depressive illness | Cohort | Maternal health: | 43% symptom-free | Good 62% |
| 8 | 25 MBU 16 community group | Control | Maternal health: BDI | Good 71% | ||
| 9 | 15 | 27% first-episode psychosis | Cohort | Maternal health: PANSS | Significant improvement for positive and general psychopathology-syndrome scores, least significant change for negative syndrome scores | High 76% |
| 10 | 91 | 69% depression disorder | Cohort | EPDS, PHQ-9, GAD-7, WSAS | Significant reductions in depression, anxiety, and overall functional impairment | Good 69% |
| 11 | 814 | 38% mood disorder | Cohort | Marcé checklist | 16% symptom-free | Good 64% |
| 12 | 51 | 100% postpartum psychosis | Cohort | EPDS, CGI, YMRS | 92.2% full remission before discharge | Good 54% |
| 13 | 55 | 100% major depressive disorder with postpartum onset | Cohort | BDI, DEQ | Depression decreased over the 3.5-year follow-up period, with only 39% scoring above the cutoff | High 76% |
| 14 | 112 | 28% schizophrenia | Cohort | Assessment measure unclear | Moderate 40% | |
| 15 | 20 MBU | Schizophrenia | Control | WPRS | Moderate 29% | |
| 16 | 2 | Chronic schizophrenia, but no current symptoms | Case series | Mother–infant relationship: PIPE | Significant improvement in mothering over the admission period | Moderate 40% |
| 17 | 49 MBU | Control | CARE-Index | The MBU group mothers became more sensitive and less unresponsive; infants were more cooperative and less passive. No difference by diagnosis. The MBU group did not differ from the healthy group at discharge, and scored significantly better than the community ill group at discharge | High 83% | |
| 18 | 50 MBU | 30% schizophrenia | Control | Mind-mindedness coding scheme | High 79% | |
| 19 | 38 | 34% schizophrenia | Cohort | Global Rating Scales of Mother–Infant Interaction | Mothers with schizophrenia scored significantly worse than the other diagnostic groups, and the infants were more avoidant, less communicative, and less engaged. Interaction was less smooth and less mutually satisfying. These results were not explained by the social and clinical differences between the groups | High 76% |
| 20 | 932 | 26% schizophrenia | Cohort | Marcé checklist | High 76% | |
| 21 | 26 | 31% schizophrenia | Cohort | Global Rating Scales of | Mothers with schizophrenia and their infants showed less positive styles of interaction than the mothers with affective disorder | Good 74% |
| 22 | 36 | 44% schizophrenia | Cohort | Mothering Skills Rating Scale | Moderate 40% | |
| 23 | 78 | 36% unipolar depression | Cohort | BMIS | Scores decreased over time and differed across diagnosis | Good 57% |
Abbreviations: BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; STAI, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory; STAXI, State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory; LES, Life Events Scale; EA-SR, Emotional Availability – Self-Report; EPDS, Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale; PSCS, Parenting Sense of Competence Scale; NPI, Neonatal Perception Index; CGI, Clinical Global Index; BMIS, Bethlem Mother–Infant Interaction Scale; PBQ, Postpartum Bonding Questionnaire; OCD, obsessive-compulsive disorder; MSCA, McCarthy Scales of Children’s Abilities; MCAST, Manchester Child Attachment Story Test; ABQ, Attachment Behavior Questionnaire; SDQ, Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire; PD, personality disorder; POSER, Play Observation Scheme and Emotion Rating; ICBS, Infant/Caregiver Behavior Scale; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; PHQ-9, Patient Health Questionnaire 9; GAD-7, Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7 scale; WSAS, Work and Social Adjustment Scale; DEQ, Depressive Experiences Questionnaire; WPRS, Wittenborn Psychiatric Rating Scale; PIPE, Pediatric Infant Parent Exam; YMRS, Young Mania Rating Scale; MBU, mother and baby unit.