Improving Mother-Infant Outcomes after Maternal Postnatal Depression

Research suggests that postnatal depression affects social, cognitive and emotional development in the child. Impaired mother-infant interactions have been observed in postnatally depressed mothers and have been posited as a mediator of the developmental effects. A previous study found that mothers...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: O'Higgins, Madeleine
Published: Institute of Education (University of London) 2007
Subjects:
155
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.487573
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-487573
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4875732015-03-20T04:46:50ZImproving Mother-Infant Outcomes after Maternal Postnatal DepressionO'Higgins, Madeleine2007Research suggests that postnatal depression affects social, cognitive and emotional development in the child. Impaired mother-infant interactions have been observed in postnatally depressed mothers and have been posited as a mediator of the developmental effects. A previous study found that mothers with postnatal depression had improved mother-infant interactions after attending baby massage classes. The current research aims to confirm and extend these finding~ and contribute to theoretical knowledge about the processes involved. Three groups participated: tvvo depressed groups, assigned randomly to baby massage classes (n=31) or support group sessions (n=31), and a group of non-depressed mothers (n=34). Mothers completed the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, the Spielberger State Anxiety Scale, the Infant Characteristics Questionnaire and a bonding scale and were filmed interacting with their infants before and after interventions, or at matched timepoints for non-depressed mothers. At one year, the Strange Situation Procedure and a distractibility task were also completed. Both depressed groups showed similar patterns of improvement on questionnaire measures over time, generally remaining worse than nondepressed mothers. At outcome, more 'massage' mothers showed a clinical reduction in depression scores than support group mothers despite no difference in mean scores. At one year, the median depression score for (massage mothers was in the non-depressed range while that of the support group remained above this range. Mother-infant interactions were not disturbed amongst depressed mothers at baseline. However, maternal interactions at one year for massage mothers were more similar to non-depressed mothers than to support group mothers. The findings show that both depressed groups improved over the study period. There is some evidence that depression scores improved more after massage classes than support group sessions. Lack of disturbance in mother-infant interactions at baseline confounded the goal of improving them and raises questions about the importance of postnatal depression as a risk factor for infant development.155Institute of Education (University of London)http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.487573Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 155
spellingShingle 155
O'Higgins, Madeleine
Improving Mother-Infant Outcomes after Maternal Postnatal Depression
description Research suggests that postnatal depression affects social, cognitive and emotional development in the child. Impaired mother-infant interactions have been observed in postnatally depressed mothers and have been posited as a mediator of the developmental effects. A previous study found that mothers with postnatal depression had improved mother-infant interactions after attending baby massage classes. The current research aims to confirm and extend these finding~ and contribute to theoretical knowledge about the processes involved. Three groups participated: tvvo depressed groups, assigned randomly to baby massage classes (n=31) or support group sessions (n=31), and a group of non-depressed mothers (n=34). Mothers completed the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, the Spielberger State Anxiety Scale, the Infant Characteristics Questionnaire and a bonding scale and were filmed interacting with their infants before and after interventions, or at matched timepoints for non-depressed mothers. At one year, the Strange Situation Procedure and a distractibility task were also completed. Both depressed groups showed similar patterns of improvement on questionnaire measures over time, generally remaining worse than nondepressed mothers. At outcome, more 'massage' mothers showed a clinical reduction in depression scores than support group mothers despite no difference in mean scores. At one year, the median depression score for (massage mothers was in the non-depressed range while that of the support group remained above this range. Mother-infant interactions were not disturbed amongst depressed mothers at baseline. However, maternal interactions at one year for massage mothers were more similar to non-depressed mothers than to support group mothers. The findings show that both depressed groups improved over the study period. There is some evidence that depression scores improved more after massage classes than support group sessions. Lack of disturbance in mother-infant interactions at baseline confounded the goal of improving them and raises questions about the importance of postnatal depression as a risk factor for infant development.
author O'Higgins, Madeleine
author_facet O'Higgins, Madeleine
author_sort O'Higgins, Madeleine
title Improving Mother-Infant Outcomes after Maternal Postnatal Depression
title_short Improving Mother-Infant Outcomes after Maternal Postnatal Depression
title_full Improving Mother-Infant Outcomes after Maternal Postnatal Depression
title_fullStr Improving Mother-Infant Outcomes after Maternal Postnatal Depression
title_full_unstemmed Improving Mother-Infant Outcomes after Maternal Postnatal Depression
title_sort improving mother-infant outcomes after maternal postnatal depression
publisher Institute of Education (University of London)
publishDate 2007
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.487573
work_keys_str_mv AT ohigginsmadeleine improvingmotherinfantoutcomesaftermaternalpostnataldepression
_version_ 1716786311294091264