| Literature DB >> 34521386 |
Jialu Qian1,2, Shiwen Sun2, Lu Liu1,2, Xiaoyan Yu3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Postpartum fatigue is the most common issue among postnatal women and it could not only seriously affect the health of mothers but also bring about adverse impacts on their offspring. This meta-analysis aims to synthesize nonpharmacological evidence and evaluate the effectiveness of interventions for reducing postpartum fatigue among puerperae.Entities:
Keywords: Depression; Fatigue; Meta-analysis; Nonpharmacological interventions; Postpartum
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34521386 PMCID: PMC8442348 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-021-04096-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Study characteristics (n = 17)
| First author | Country | Study design | Population | Sample size (intervention/control) | Intervention | Frequency | Intervention start time and duration | Control | Evaluation time points | Fatigue assessment tools | Psychological assessment tools |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ashrafinia [ (2015) | Iran | RCT | Primiparous women, EPDS<10 | 80 (40/40) | Pilates home exercises | 5 times a week (30 min/session) | Intervention was started 72 h after delivery and continued for 8 weeks | Routine care | Baseline, 4 weeks, 8 weeks postpartum | MFI-20 | / |
Dritsa [ (2008) | Canada | RCT | Women in the postpartum (4–38 weeks), EPDS≧10 | 88 (46/42) | Aerobic exercise, stretching and strength exercises | 60–120 min/week, 4 times | Intervention was started 4–38 weeks (mean: 10.96) postpartum and continued for 12 weeks | Assessing exercise participation once a month | Baseline, post-treatment and 3 months post-treatment | MFI-20 | / |
Ko [ (2008) | China | A control group pre−/post-program design | Postpartum women who were “doing-the-month” | 61 (31/30) | A low-intensity exercise program | 6 sessions | Intervention was started from the first week postpartum and continued for 3 weeks | Usual care | Before and after the program | FSC | CES-D Scale |
Lee [ (2016) | UK | RCT | Postnatal women who had given birth between 6 weeks and one year previously | 65 (33/32) | Physical activity consultations and a moderate-intensity walking programme | 30–55 min/time, one session each week | Intervention was started at 6 weeks to one year after delivery and continued for 10 weeks | Received a leaflet with information on physical activity | Baseline, three-month and six-month follow-up. | VAS-F | AGWBI |
Yang [ (2019) | China | RCT | Postnatal women who had vaginal delivery, EPDS ≦ 10 | 140 (70/70) | Moderate-intensity aerobic exercise | At least 3 times a week (15 min per section) | Intervention was started at 6 weeks after childbirth and continued for 12 weeks | Usual care | Baseline, at 4 weeks and 12 weeks postintervention | PFS | PSS, EPDS |
Doering [ (2018) | USA | Quasi-experimental | Postpartum women who had a healthy singleton newborn | 27 (15/12) | Helping U Get Sleep. Self-management intervention was offered via home visit and phone calls | A home visit and 4 phone calls | Intervention was started at the third week postpartum and continued for 3 weeks. | Health education related to sleep | Baseline, postpartum weeks 4, 6 and 9 | MFSC | / |
Gholami [ (2017) | Iran | A control group pre−/post-program design | Women who had given birth | 120 (40/40/40) | Educational behavioural interventions including instructions of the health approaches, relaxation techniques (face-to-face/ e-learning) | 3 times | Intervention was started on 10 days after delivery and continued for 50 days | Usual care | Before and after the intervention | FSS | / |
Giallo [ (2014) | Australia | RCT | Mothers who had a child younger than the age of 6 months | 202 (63/67/72) | Intervention group 1 (professionally led support): offer workbook, home visit and phone calls; Intervention group 2 (self-directed written): read workbook containing information about fatigue | A workbook, home visit, and 3 telephone support calls; reading the workbook | Intervention was started within 6 months after delivery and continued for 4 weeks | Usual care | Baseline, 6 and 12 weeks after the baseline | FAS, FSS, | DASS-21 |
Milani [ (2017) | Iran | Clinical trial | Healthy postpartum mothers, EDPS< 10 | 276 (92/184) | A comprehensive postpartum home care program giving instructions of personal hygiene, mental, psychological, and sexual health, oral and dental health and so on | 2 home visits | Intervention was started immediately postpartum care and continued for 60 days | Usual care | Pretest and posttest | Fatigue rate | EPDS |
Ozcan [ (2020) | Turkey | RCT | Primiparous women | 117 (58/59) | Levin’s conservation model containing instructions of nutrition, sleep, breastfeeding and so on | 8 sessions, each session lasted 60–120 min. | Intervention was started between postpartum 4th and 7th days and continued for 12 weeks | Usual care | Pretest and posttest | VAS-F | / |
Stremler [ (2013) | Canada | RCT | Primiparous women | 246 (123/123) | Behavioural-educational sleep intervention containing sleep promotion strategies, sleep hygiene and so on | A 45–60 min meeting, a 20 page booklet, and 3 phone contacts. | Intervention was started before mothers’ discharge from hospital and continued for 4 weeks | Usual care | Baseline, 6 and 12 weeks | VAS-F | EPDS |
Troy [ (2003) | USA | Quasi-experimental | Healthy primiparous postpartum mothers | 68 (32/36) | The Tiredness Management Guide containing a list of several techniques for postpartum fatigue management | Women in the intervention group were asked to use the TMG whenever they felt tired | Intervention was started at 2 weeks after delivery and continued for 4 weeks | Usual care | Fatigue was assessed six times per week, before going to bed and again on rising from Tuesday evening to Friday morning | VAS-F | / |
Chang [ (2015) | China | RCT | Postnatal women with poor sleep quality (PSQS score ≧16) | 80 (40/40) | Drink one cup of chamomile tea | Every day | Intervention was started at 6 weeks after childbirth and continued for 2 weeks | Usual care | Baseline and at 2 and 4 weeks post intervention | PFS | EPDS |
Chen [ (2015) | China | RCT | Postnatal women with poor sleep quality (PSQS score ≧16) | 80 (40/40) | Drink one cup of Lavender tea | Every day | Intervention was started at 6 weeks after childbirth and continued for 2 weeks | Usual care | Baseline, 2-week posttest and 4-week posttest | PFS | EPDS |
Funda [ (2020) | Turkey | RCT | Primiparous and had a vaginal delivery at the 37th to 40th weeks of gestation | 80 (40/40) | Mother-infant skin-to-skin contact | 1 time | Intervention was started from the first hour following the delivery and continued for 30 min | Usual care | Before and after the intervention | VAS-F | / |
Hsieh [ (2017) | China | Quasi-experimental | Healthy postpartum women | 356 (94/264) | Take warm showers | 1 time | Intervention was started on the second postpartum day and continued for 20 min | Usual care | The first postpartum day and the second postpartum day | PFS | / |
Vaziri [ (2017) | Iran | RCT | Primiparous women with normal vaginal delivery | 56 (29/27) | Breathe lavender oil aroma | 3 times, 10–15 min each time | Intervention was started immediately postpartum care and completed in 1 day | Sesame oil used as placebo | Baseline, after the first intervention and the tomorrow morning assessment | VAS-F | VAS for distress, PANAS |
Notes: RCT Randomized clinical trial, MFI-20 Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory, PFS Postpartum Fatigue Scale, VAS-F Visual analogue scale for fatigue, FAS Fatigue Assessment Scale, MFSC Modified Fatigue Symptoms Checklist, FSC Fatigue Symptom Checklist, EDPS Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, DASS-21 Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-21, CES-D Scale Chinese version of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, PANAS Positive and Negative Affect Schedule, PSS Perceived Stress Scale, AGWBI Adapted General Well-Being Index
Fig. 2Risk of bias for individual RCTs
Fig. 3Risk of bias summaries for the included RCTs
Results of the quality appraisal of nonrandomized studies (n = 6)
| Domain 1 | Domain 2 | Domain 3 | Domain 4 | Domain 5 | Domain 6 | Domain 7 | Judgement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doering (2018) [ | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate |
| Gholami (2017) [ | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate |
| Hsieh (2017) [ | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate |
| Ko (2008) [ | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate |
| Milani (2017) [ | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate |
| Troy (2003) [ | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate |
Notes: Domain 1: Confounding; Domain 2: Selection of participants into the study; Domain 3: Classification of interventions; Domain 4: Deviations from intended interventions; Domain 5: Missing data; Domain 6: Measurement of outcomes; Domain 7: Selection of the reported results
Fig. 4Forest plots for the effect of exercise on fatigue (A) and depression (B) postintervention. Notes: Ashrafinia et al.’s study assessed general fatigue (a), physical fatigue (b), reduced activity (c), reduced motivation (d), and mental fatigue (e)
Fig. 5Forest plots for the effect of psychoeducational interventions on fatigue at postintervention (A), depression at postintervention (B), fatigue scores at the 8-week follow-up (C), and depression scores at the 8-week follow-up (D). Notes: Gholami et al.’s study included two intervention groups (i: e-learning and ii: face to face), which had assessment scores. Giallo et al.’s study included two intervention groups (i: professionally led telephone support and ii: self-directed written), and it used two independent scales (a: FAS and b: FSS) to assess fatigue symptoms in the same group. Troy et al.’s study examined morning fatigue (a) and evening fatigue (b)
Fig. 6Forest plots for the effect of drinking tea on fatigue at postintervention (A), depression at postintervention (B), fatigue scores at the 2-week follow-up, (C) and depression scores at the 2-week follow-up (D)