Panagiota D Tryphonopoulos1, Nicole Letourneau2. 1. Arthur Labatt Family School of Nursing, Western University, FIMS and Nursing Building, London, Ontario, Canada. 2. Faculty of Nursing, Cumming School of Medicine (Pediatrics, Psychiatry & Community Health Sciences), University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mothers and infants affected by postpartum depression are known to have (1) reduced quality interactions and (2) elevated cortisol levels, both of which are linked to negative developmental outcomes in children. Parent training promoting sensitive and responsive maternal-infant interactions may help optimize development in children of mothers with postpartum depression. OBJECTIVES: This pilot study tested a video-feedback interaction guidance intervention designed to improve maternal-infant interaction, depressive symptoms, and cortisol patterns of depressed mothers and their infants. METHOD: An experimental, pre-test, post-test design was employed to randomly assign mothers with postpartum depression to intervention (n = 6) and control (n = 6) conditions. Intervention mothers received three video-feedback sessions during home visits, provided at three-week intervals. Control participants received three home visits on the same schedule. RESULTS: Significant differences favoring the intervention group were observed in maternal-infant interaction quality, especially maternal sensitivity and cognitive growth fostering activities, and in reduced infant diurnal cortisol. CONCLUSION:Professionally guided video-feedback intervention appears to support improvements in interactions between depressed mothers and their infants and optimizes infants' diurnal cortisol patterns. The findings from this feasibility pilot study have been used to support a large-scale follow-up exploration.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Mothers and infants affected by postpartum depression are known to have (1) reduced quality interactions and (2) elevated cortisol levels, both of which are linked to negative developmental outcomes in children. Parent training promoting sensitive and responsive maternal-infant interactions may help optimize development in children of mothers with postpartum depression. OBJECTIVES: This pilot study tested a video-feedback interaction guidance intervention designed to improve maternal-infant interaction, depressive symptoms, and cortisol patterns of depressed mothers and their infants. METHOD: An experimental, pre-test, post-test design was employed to randomly assign mothers with postpartum depression to intervention (n = 6) and control (n = 6) conditions. Intervention mothers received three video-feedback sessions during home visits, provided at three-week intervals. Control participants received three home visits on the same schedule. RESULTS: Significant differences favoring the intervention group were observed in maternal-infant interaction quality, especially maternal sensitivity and cognitive growth fostering activities, and in reduced infant diurnal cortisol. CONCLUSION: Professionally guided video-feedback intervention appears to support improvements in interactions between depressed mothers and their infants and optimizes infants' diurnal cortisol patterns. The findings from this feasibility pilot study have been used to support a large-scale follow-up exploration.