4.7 Article

Effectiveness of Smartphone-Based Mindfulness Training on Maternal Perinatal Depression: Randomized Controlled Trial

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC
DOI: 10.2196/23410

Keywords

mindfulness; pregnancy; perinatal care; depression; mHealth; mobile health; psychosocial intervention

Funding

  1. Chinese National Funding of Social Sciences [17BSH054]
  2. China Scholarship Council

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This study evaluated the effectiveness of smartphone-based mindfulness training during pregnancy on perinatal depression and mental health indicators. Results showed significant improvement in depression and secondary outcomes for pregnant women who participated in mindfulness training compared to the control group. Mindfulness training was effective in improving maternal perinatal depression, especially for nulliparous women.
Background: Despite potential for benefit, mindfulness remains an emergent area in perinatal mental health care, and evidence of smartphone-based mindfulness training for perinatal depression is especially limited. Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a smartphone-based mindfulness training intervention during pregnancy on perinatal depression and other mental health problems with a randomized controlled design. Methods: Pregnant adult women who were potentially at risk of perinatal depression were recruited from an obstetrics clinic and randomized to a self-guided 8-week smartphone-based mindfulness training during pregnancy group or attention control group. Mental health indicators were surveyed over five time points through the postpartum period by online self-assessment. The assessor who collected the follow-up data was blind to the assignment. The primary outcome was depression as measured by symptoms, and secondary outcomes were anxiety, stress, affect, sleep, fatigue, memory, and fear. Results: A total of 168 participants were randomly allocated to the mindfulness training (n=84) or attention control (n=84) group. The overall dropout rate was 34.5%, and 52.4% of the participants completed the intervention Mindfulness training participants reported significant improvement of depression (group x time interaction chi(2)(4) =16.2, P=.003) and secondary outcomes (chi(2)(4)= 13 . 1, P=.01 for anxiety; chi(2)(4) =8.4, P=.04 for positive affect) compared to attention control group participants. Medium between-group effect sizes were found on depression and positive affect at postintervention, and on anxiety in late pregnancy (Cohen d=0.47, -0.49, and 0.46, respectively) Mindfulness training participants reported a decreased risk of positive depressive symptom (Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale [EPDS] score>9) compared to attention control participants postintervention (odds ratio [OR] 0.391, 95% CI 0.164-0.930) and significantly higher depression symptom remission with different EPDS reduction scores from preintervention to postintervention (OR 3.471-27.986). Parity did not show a significant moderating effect; however, for nulliparous women, mindfulness training participants had significantly improved depression symptoms compared to nulliparous attention control group participants (group x time interaction chi(2)(4) =18.1, P=.001). Conclusions: Smartphone-based mindfulness training is an effective intervention in improving maternal perinatal depression for those who are potentially at risk of perinatal depression in early pregnancy. Nulliparous women are a promising subgroup who may benefit more from mindfulness training.

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