Effects of a psychosocial couple-based prevention program on adverse birth outcomes.

Matern Child Health J

Prevention Research Center, Penn State University, 314 Biobehavioral Health, University Park, PA, 16802, USA,

Published: January 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Maternal stress and depression are linked to adverse birth outcomes (ABOs), but few studies focus on mental health interventions to reduce these outcomes.
  • A study evaluated the Family Foundations program for couples, which improved coparenting and was known to help with maternal stress and depression, assessing its effect on ABOs in 148 expectant mothers.
  • The program reduced the risk of C-section and mitigated the negative effects of high cortisol levels on birth weight and gestational age, suggesting that such interventions can benefit at-risk women.

Article Abstract

Although maternal stress and depression have been linked to adverse birth outcomes (ABOs), few studies have investigated preventive interventions targeting maternal mental health as a means of reducing ABOs. This randomized controlled study examines the impact of Family Foundations (FF)-a transition to parenthood program for couples focused on promoting coparenting quality, with previously documented impact on maternal stress and depression-on ABOs. We also examine whether intervention buffers birth outcomes from the negative effect of elevated salivary cortisol levels. We use intent-to-treat analyses to assess the main effects of the FF intervention on ABOs (prematurity, birth weight, pregnancy complications, Cesarean section, and days in hospital for mothers and infants) among 148 expectant mothers. We also test the interaction of cortisol with intervention condition status in predicting ABOs. FF participation was associated with reduced risk of C-section (OR .357, p < 0.05, 95 % CI 0.149, 0.862), but did not have main effects on other ABOs. FF significantly buffered (p < 0.05) the negative impact of maternal cortisol on birth weight, gestational age, and days in hospital for infants; that is, among women with relatively higher levels of prenatal cortisol, the intervention reduced ABOs. These results demonstrate that a psycho-educational program for couples reduces incidence of ABOs among higher risk women. Future work should test whether reduced maternal stress and depression mediate these intervention effects.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4321726PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10995-014-1500-5DOI Listing

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