| Literature DB >> 33317463 |
Kerry Evans1, Helen Spiby2,3, C Jane Morrell2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To design and develop an intervention to support women with symptoms of mild to moderate anxiety in pregnancy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33317463 PMCID: PMC7734709 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-020-03469-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Fig. 1Key elements of the development and evaluation process (Based on MRC, [24])
Summary of the findings from the systematic reviews and the theory underpinning the intervention components
| Women’s views on intervention components | Theory | |
|---|---|---|
| Group and individual interventions | ||
| Interventions delivered to groups of pregnant women | • Able to share experiences • Accessed group support • Reduced feelings of isolation • Helped to normalise women’s experiences | • Social support °Experiential knowledge °Social learning °Social comparison °Peer support |
| Interventions delivered to individuals | • Received support from HCPs • Provided reassurance and guidance | • Therapeutic relationships °Collaborative role theory °Relational continuity °Social influence |
| Intervention components | ||
| Mind-body | • Provided options and coping strategies for managing anxiety symptoms • Learned breathing and relaxation techniques • Learned to recognise and adapt to anxious thoughts • Felt more positive about the future | • Awareness, self-regulation and adapted behaviour • Relaxation response |
| Psychological | • Developed an understanding of the causes of anxiety in their lives and self-awareness of their thought patterns. • Helped women respond in a more positive way to situations and feelings, before negative thought patterns could escalate. | • Cognitive behavioural mechanisms |
Fig. 2Theoretical model outlining the mechanisms which are considered to result in an improvement in anxiety symptoms for pregnant women
Fig. 3Methods of delivery for the intervention components
Fig. 4Intervention components, intended impact and outcomes
Foundation and rationale for the final intervention design
| Description | Foundation and rationale | |
|---|---|---|
| Nulliparous women in the second trimester of pregnancy. | ||
1. Nulliparous pregnant women 2. Self- report mild-moderate anxiety 1.Receiving treatment for a severe and enduring mentalhealth condition. 2. Complex social factors (NICE [ | ||
| The anxiety measurement tool will be administered by thecommunity midwife to indicate women who meet the cut-offscore for mild to moderate. | ||
| The intervention will be facilitated by midwives and co-facilitatedby MSWs. They will receive training to deliver the intervention.One midwife and one support worker will facilitate each group. | ||
Delivered in three components: | ||
Key assumptions, process interventions and indicators relating to the Theory of Change for the proposed intervention
Assumptions a | 1. Midwives and midwifery support workers are motivated to apply to be trained and participate as intervention facilitators; Maternity mangers are willing to release midwives and midwifery supporters time to complete training and facilitate the intervention; Intervention facilitators are supported by specialist PMH teams and professional midwifery advocates |
| 2. Community midwives are confident and competent to delivery anxiety screening tools; Community midwives feel confident to discuss perinatal mental health with women and create the right context for women to disclose their symptoms and access supportive services | |
3. Specialist perinatal mental health teams and psychological services support the intervention as a service for women with sub-threshold symptoms of anxiety Specialist perinatal mental health teams and psychological services are willing to support intervention facilitators by providing training in supporting women with anxiety and provide advice and referral pathways for women who are identified as having more severe symptoms or requiring more specialist support | |
4. Women are willing to disclose their symptoms and women with mild to moderate symptoms of anxiety are willing to attend and engage with the intervention Women who develop more severe symptoms or are identified by intervention facilitators are requiring specialist support are willing to be accept a referral to specialist PMH services for assessment and treatment | |
Interventions iv | 2. Recruitment and training of facilitators |
| 1. Intervention co-ordinator trained to monitor the intervention fidelity, measure outcomes and support facilitators across maternity systems | |
3. Training of community midwives to effectively screen for symptoms of anxiety and refer women with mild to moderate anxiety to intervention facilitators Intervention facilitators to raise awareness of the intervention in local community teams | |
| 4. Establish a multi-disciplinary stakeholder team to support the implementation of the intervention | |
| 5. Women who develop more severe symptoms or are identified by intervention facilitators are requiring specialist support are referred to specialist PMH services for assessment and treatment | |
Indicators id | 2. Facilitators assessment of the usefulness of training and preparedness to facilitate the intervention |
| 3. 80% of community midwives are aware of the intervention and know how to refer women to intervention facilitators; 80% of women who are identified with mild to moderate symptoms of anxiety and are eligible for participation are referred to intervention facilitators | |
| 1. Intervention fidelity assessment reaches pre-agreed standards; Facilitators feel well supported in their roles; The intervention is implemented across maternity care systems | |
| 4. Women attend 75% of intervention sessions; Rates of appropriate referrals to specialist services | |
| 5. Women report an improvement in generalised and pregnancy-specific anxiety scores (pre-agreed % in improvement); Women’s evaluation of the acceptability and usefulness of the intervention; Improvement in infant outcomes; Improvement in perinatal mental health in the postnatal period (3, 6 and 12 months) |
Fig. 5Theory of Change Map for an intervention to support women with symptoms of mild to moderate anxiety in pregnancy