4.1 Article

A Non-Randomized Controlled Trial for Reducing Postpartum Depression in Low-Income Minority Women at Community-Based Women's Health Clinics

Journal

MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL
Volume 26, Issue 8, Pages 1689-1700

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10995-022-03434-1

Keywords

Postpartum depression; Low-income minority women; Non-randomized control trial; Intervention; Bedouin women

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Israel [8762591]

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This study analyzed an intervention that provided tailored clinic staff training and aimed to reduce postpartum depression (PPD) among low-income Bedouin women in southern Israel by raising awareness and providing social support. The results showed that the intervention group had a greater decrease in EPDS score and positive EPDS change compared to the control group. High PPD awareness contributed to positive EPDS change in the intervention group, and high social support protected against negative EPDS change in both groups.
Objective To analyze an intervention that delivered tailored clinic staff training on postpartum depression (PPD) followed by awareness raising and social support aimed at lowering PPD among low-income Bedouin women in southern Israel. Methods We conducted a non-randomized controlled trial at two women's health clinics. The study included 332 of the 384 eligible women recruited at baseline (intervention = 169, control = 163), who completed two face-to-face interviews, one at 26-38 weeks of pregnancy (Time 1) and one 2-4 months postpartum (Time 2). PPD was measured by the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) and dichotomized using a >= 10 score cutoff. We calculated EPDS change (rate difference of dichotomous EPDS from Time 1 to Time 2) (no change, positive change, or negative change), and compared EPDS changes in a control clinic vs. an intervention clinic. Results The intervention group showed a greater decrease in dichotomous EPDS >= 10 between times 1 and 2 (38.5% to 17.2%) than the control group (31.9% to 29.4%, PV = 0.008). Multinomial logistic regression showed that high PPD awareness significantly contributed to positive EPDS change in the intervention group (PV = 0.003) and high social support significantly protected against negative EPDS change in both groups, intervention (PV = 0.001) and control (PV = 0.003). Conclusions In low-income women, an intervention focusing on increasing PPD awareness and social support following staff training was associated with reduced EPDS and positive EPDS change following the intervention. Similar interventions should be implemented in women's clinics during pregnancy.

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