| Literature DB >> 30515108 |
Marie Furuta1, Antje Horsch2,3, Edmond S W Ng4, Debra Bick5, Debbie Spain6, Jacqueline Sin7,8.
Abstract
Background: Approximately 3% of women in community samples develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after childbirth. Higher prevalence rates are reported for high risk samples. Postpartum PTSD can adversely affect women's wellbeing, mother-infant relationships and child development. This study aims to examine the effectiveness of trauma-focused psychological interventions (TFPT), for postnatal women.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive therapy; meta-analysis; perinatal; postpartum; posttraumatic stress; posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD); psychotherapy; trauma-focused
Year: 2018 PMID: 30515108 PMCID: PMC6255986 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Search strategy (Medline).
| exp pregnancy/ | exp cognitive therapy/ | exp clinical trial/ | ||
| exp pregnancy outcome/ | CBT.mp. | exp controlled clinical trial/ | ||
| exp delivery, obstetric/ | exp eye movement desensitization reprocessing/ | exp clinical trial, phase II/ | ||
| exp pregnancy complications/ | EMDR | exp randomized controlled Trial/ | ||
| exp parturition/ | exp behavior therapy/ | exp random allocation/ | ||
| birth.mp | Behavior* therapy.mp | exp psychology, experimental/ | ||
| childbirth.mp | exp psychotherapy/ | exp cohort studies/ | ||
| exp postnatal care/ | psychological.mp | exp case-control studies/ | ||
| postnatal.mp. | exp psychological techniques/ | exp control groups/ | ||
| exp postpartum period/ | exp psychology, experimental/ | randomized.mp | ||
| postpartum.mp | Trauma focused.mp | trial.mp | ||
| exp maternal health services/ | exp stress disorders, post-traumatic/ | RCT.mp | ||
| exp maternal-child health services/ | intervention | |||
| exp infant, newborn/ | ||||
| exp cesarean section/ | ||||
| cesarean | ||||
| exp stillbirth/ | ||||
| exp intensive care, neonatal/ | ||||
| exp intensive care units, neonatal/ |
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart of paper screening process.
Characteristics of included studies.
| ( | Italy | Unclear | RCT | Unclear | I: women with a stable affective relationship E: women with pregnancy-related problems and/or diagnosed psychopathology | Expressive writing plus usual care | Usual postnatal care | 64 | PTSD symptoms - measured with PPQ |
| ( | Italy | Hospital | RCT | 2003–2007 | I: women with absence of complications connected to labor and established the good health of the mother and child E: women with psychological and psychiatric pathologies | Expressive writing plus usual care | Usual postnatal care | 242 | PTSD symptoms - measured with PPQ |
| ( | Italy | Hospital | RCT | Unclear | I: women with adequate knowledge of the Italian language; no psychiatric diagnosis in anamnesis; age ≥18, a healthy baby with the Apgar score > 7 at 1 and at 5 min. after birth. | Expressive writing about the deep emotion connected with delivery and childbirth | Usual postnatal care and neutral writing to describe daily events | 113 | PTSD symptoms - measured with PPQ |
| ( | Switzer-land | Community | RCT | 2012–2014 | I: women with very preterm infant (< 32 weeks of gestation or < 1500 g birth weight) alive at the time of recruitment and group allocation (3 months), E: not speak French sufficiently to complete the questionnaires; attending regular counseling or psychotherapy sessions at the time of recruitment or group allocation (3 months). | Expressive writing with specific reference to the experience of prematurity plus usual care | Usual postnatal care | 94 | PTSD symptoms–measured with PPQ |
| ( | Switzer-land | Hospital | RCT | 2015 | I: women who had EmCS with a live baby at term in the previous 6 h in the maternity department; and age ≥18; E: women with planned CS; insufficient French language; and baby transferred to neonatal intensive care unit. | Engaging in a cognitive task, the computer game Tetris, for 15 min. plus usual care | Usual postnatal care | 56 | PTSD symptoms–measured with PDS |
| ( | Iran | Local health center | RCT | 2016 | I: women with perinatal loss occurred at more than 22 weeks gestational age; no history of stillbirth or miscarriage in previous pregnancies; no history of mental disorders; absence of other stressful events in the past year; age ≥18; and literacy E: failure to participate in more than one intervention session and the possible incidence of crisis or loss of relatives during the study. | 4 psychological counseling sessions with the predetermined structure and content, in small groups plus usual care | Usual postnatal care | 100 | PTSD symptoms - measured with PPQ |
| ( | Sweden | Community | RCT | 2014 | I: women having self-reported PTSD symptoms related to a traumatic childbirth and a TES sum score ≥30; aged ≥ 18; having access to a computer and the internet; being able to read and write Swedish; not being pregnant; not having problems requiring more urgent care; not currently participating in psychotherapy; not currently having a serious problem that would be better treated with psychiatric care; having medication, having taken the same dose for at least 1 month, with no intention to change the dose during the course of the programme; and minimum 3 months since the traumatic delivery. | Trauma-focused guided Internet-based cognitive behavior therapy plus usual care | Usual postnatal care and waiting list control | 56 | PTSD symptoms - measured with TES and IES-R |
| ( | Austra-lia | Hospital | RCT | 1996–1997 | I: Women delivered at ≥35 weeks' gestation E: insufficient English to complete questionnaires, being under psychological care at the time of delivery; age < 18; or the infant needing neonatal intensive care | Stress debriefing plus usual care | Usual postnatal care | 1,745 | PTSD symptoms - measured with IES-R |
| ( | US | Hospital | RCT | 2011–2012 | I: English- and Spanish speaking mothers aged ≥18 years; whose infants born in 25 to 34 weeks' gestational age with >600 g or transferred to a NICUs within the first week of delivery | A manual-driven, CBT-based, trauma focused programme of 6–9 sessions plus mother-redefinition/education intervention plus usual care | Usual postnatal care and attention-control (a 45-min information session on NICU with education about parenting the premature infant) | 105 | PTSD symptoms - measured with DTS and MINI |
| ( | Sweden | Outpatient clinic | Case studies | 2001–2003 | I: women with severe fear of childbirth after a previous traumatic child-birth | EMDR plus usual care | Self-comparison (before receiving EMDR) | 4 | PTSD symptoms - measured with TES |
| ( | Canada | Hospital | RCT | Unclear | I: women who had a singleton infant born < 1500g, able to speak and read either English or French; and living within a 90-minute radius of the hospital. E: women whose infant shared the same room with another infant whose mother had already joined the study; had multiple births; infant in a highly unstable medical condition and/or likely to be transferred or discharged in < 4 weeks | 6 sessions to teach mothers to recognize own and infant's signs of anxiety/ distress, and to utilize various strategies to reduce distress and respond sensitively plus usual care | Usual postnatal care and general information about infant care | 98 | PTSD symptoms - measured with PPQ |
Number of participants who consented to participate in the study.
EmCS, Emergency Cesarean section; CS, Cesarean section; DSM-IV, Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, 4th edition; DTS, Davidson Trauma Scale (.
Quality assessment of included RCTs.
| ( | RCT | ? | ? | ? | × | ? | ? |
| ( | RCT | ? | ? | ? | × | ? | ? |
| ( | RCT | ✓ | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? |
| ( | RCT | ✓ | ✓ | ? | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| ( | RCT | ✓ | ✓ | ? | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| ( | RCT | × | × | ? | ? | ? | ? |
| ( | RCT | ✓ | ? | ? | ? | ? | ✓ |
| ( | RCT | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ✓ |
| ( | RCT | ✓ | ? | ? | ? | ✓ | ✓ |
| ( | RCT | ? | ? | ✓ | ? | ✓ | ✓ |
Risk of bias assessment was conducted on the main paper.
✓Low risk of bias; × High risk of bias; ? Unclear risk of bias.
Figure 2Effect of psychological therapies on clinically significant level of posttraumatic stress symptoms (short term: up to 3 months postpartum).
Figure 3Effect of psychological therapies on posttraumatic stress symptoms scores (short term: up to 3 months postpartum).
Figure 4Effect of psychological therapies on posttraumatic stress symptom—mean score changes from baseline (short term: up to 3 months postpartum).
Figure 5Effect of psychological therapies on posttraumatic stress symptom scores (medium term: 3–6 months postpartum).