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MAternal Mental Health in the WORKplace (MAMH@WORK): A Protocol for Promoting Perinatal Maternal Mental Health and Wellbeing

Women are exposed to increased burden of mental disorders during the perinatal period: 13–19% experience postpartum depression. Perinatal psychological suffering affects early mother-child relationship, impacting child’s emotional and cognitive development. Return-to-work brings additional vulnerabi...

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Autores principales: Costa, Joana, Santos, Osvaldo, Virgolino, Ana, Pereira, M. Emília, Stefanovska-Petkovska, Miodraga, Silva, Henrique, Navarro-Costa, Paulo, Barbosa, Miguel, das Neves, Rui César, Duarte e Silva, Inês, Alarcão, Violeta, Vargas, Ricardo, Heitor, Maria João
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7967657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33806518
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18052558
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author Costa, Joana
Santos, Osvaldo
Virgolino, Ana
Pereira, M. Emília
Stefanovska-Petkovska, Miodraga
Silva, Henrique
Navarro-Costa, Paulo
Barbosa, Miguel
das Neves, Rui César
Duarte e Silva, Inês
Alarcão, Violeta
Vargas, Ricardo
Heitor, Maria João
author_facet Costa, Joana
Santos, Osvaldo
Virgolino, Ana
Pereira, M. Emília
Stefanovska-Petkovska, Miodraga
Silva, Henrique
Navarro-Costa, Paulo
Barbosa, Miguel
das Neves, Rui César
Duarte e Silva, Inês
Alarcão, Violeta
Vargas, Ricardo
Heitor, Maria João
author_sort Costa, Joana
collection PubMed
description Women are exposed to increased burden of mental disorders during the perinatal period: 13–19% experience postpartum depression. Perinatal psychological suffering affects early mother-child relationship, impacting child’s emotional and cognitive development. Return-to-work brings additional vulnerability given the required balance between parenting and job demands. The MAternal Mental Health in the WORKplace (MAMH@WORK) project aims to develop and evaluate the effectiveness of a brief and sustainable intervention, promoting (a) maternal mental health throughout pregnancy and first 12 months after delivery, and (b) quality of mother–child interactions, child emotional self-regulation, and cognitive self-control, while (c) reducing perinatal absenteeism and presenteeism. MAMH@WORK is a three-arm randomized controlled trial. A short-term cognitive-behavioral therapy-based (CBT-based) psychoeducation plus biofeedback intervention will be implemented by psychiatrists and psychologists, following a standardized procedure manual developed after consensus (Delphi method). Participants (n = 225, primiparous, singleton pregnant women at 28–30 weeks gestational age, aged 18–40 years, employed) will be randomly allocated to arms: CBT-based psychoeducation intervention (including mindfulness); psychoeducation plus biofeedback intervention; and control. Assessments will take place before and after delivery. Main outcomes (and main tools): mental health literacy (MHLS), psychological wellbeing (HADS, EPDS, KBS, CD-RISC, BRIEF COPE), quality of mother–child interaction, child–mother attachment, child emotional self-regulation and cognitive self-control (including PBQ, Strange Situation Procedure, QDIBRB, SGS-II, CARE-Index), job engagement (UWES), and presenteeism. Intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses will be conducted; Cohen’s d coefficient, Cramer’s V and odds ratio will be used to assess the effect size of the intervention. MAMH@WORK is expected to contribute to mental health promotion during the perinatal period and beyond. Its results have the potential to inform health policies regarding work–life balance and maternal mental health and wellbeing promotion in the workplace.
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spelling pubmed-79676572021-03-18 MAternal Mental Health in the WORKplace (MAMH@WORK): A Protocol for Promoting Perinatal Maternal Mental Health and Wellbeing Costa, Joana Santos, Osvaldo Virgolino, Ana Pereira, M. Emília Stefanovska-Petkovska, Miodraga Silva, Henrique Navarro-Costa, Paulo Barbosa, Miguel das Neves, Rui César Duarte e Silva, Inês Alarcão, Violeta Vargas, Ricardo Heitor, Maria João Int J Environ Res Public Health Study Protocol Women are exposed to increased burden of mental disorders during the perinatal period: 13–19% experience postpartum depression. Perinatal psychological suffering affects early mother-child relationship, impacting child’s emotional and cognitive development. Return-to-work brings additional vulnerability given the required balance between parenting and job demands. The MAternal Mental Health in the WORKplace (MAMH@WORK) project aims to develop and evaluate the effectiveness of a brief and sustainable intervention, promoting (a) maternal mental health throughout pregnancy and first 12 months after delivery, and (b) quality of mother–child interactions, child emotional self-regulation, and cognitive self-control, while (c) reducing perinatal absenteeism and presenteeism. MAMH@WORK is a three-arm randomized controlled trial. A short-term cognitive-behavioral therapy-based (CBT-based) psychoeducation plus biofeedback intervention will be implemented by psychiatrists and psychologists, following a standardized procedure manual developed after consensus (Delphi method). Participants (n = 225, primiparous, singleton pregnant women at 28–30 weeks gestational age, aged 18–40 years, employed) will be randomly allocated to arms: CBT-based psychoeducation intervention (including mindfulness); psychoeducation plus biofeedback intervention; and control. Assessments will take place before and after delivery. Main outcomes (and main tools): mental health literacy (MHLS), psychological wellbeing (HADS, EPDS, KBS, CD-RISC, BRIEF COPE), quality of mother–child interaction, child–mother attachment, child emotional self-regulation and cognitive self-control (including PBQ, Strange Situation Procedure, QDIBRB, SGS-II, CARE-Index), job engagement (UWES), and presenteeism. Intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses will be conducted; Cohen’s d coefficient, Cramer’s V and odds ratio will be used to assess the effect size of the intervention. MAMH@WORK is expected to contribute to mental health promotion during the perinatal period and beyond. Its results have the potential to inform health policies regarding work–life balance and maternal mental health and wellbeing promotion in the workplace. MDPI 2021-03-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7967657/ /pubmed/33806518 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18052558 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Costa, Joana
Santos, Osvaldo
Virgolino, Ana
Pereira, M. Emília
Stefanovska-Petkovska, Miodraga
Silva, Henrique
Navarro-Costa, Paulo
Barbosa, Miguel
das Neves, Rui César
Duarte e Silva, Inês
Alarcão, Violeta
Vargas, Ricardo
Heitor, Maria João
MAternal Mental Health in the WORKplace (MAMH@WORK): A Protocol for Promoting Perinatal Maternal Mental Health and Wellbeing
title MAternal Mental Health in the WORKplace (MAMH@WORK): A Protocol for Promoting Perinatal Maternal Mental Health and Wellbeing
title_full MAternal Mental Health in the WORKplace (MAMH@WORK): A Protocol for Promoting Perinatal Maternal Mental Health and Wellbeing
title_fullStr MAternal Mental Health in the WORKplace (MAMH@WORK): A Protocol for Promoting Perinatal Maternal Mental Health and Wellbeing
title_full_unstemmed MAternal Mental Health in the WORKplace (MAMH@WORK): A Protocol for Promoting Perinatal Maternal Mental Health and Wellbeing
title_short MAternal Mental Health in the WORKplace (MAMH@WORK): A Protocol for Promoting Perinatal Maternal Mental Health and Wellbeing
title_sort maternal mental health in the workplace (mamh@work): a protocol for promoting perinatal maternal mental health and wellbeing
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7967657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33806518
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18052558
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