Psychosocial and psychological interventions can prevent postpartum depression, says new Cochrane review

Pensive woman

The period after giving birth to a child can be difficult for women and in the first twelve weeks after childbirth 13-19% of women will experience post-partum depression (O’Hara 1996, Gaynes 2005). Post-partum depression is bad news – not only does it increase the chance of the mother going onto develop a severe clinical depression but it also can affect the quality of the mother-child bond during a critical period in the development of the infant, and this can have long term effects.

This Cochrane review set out to see if it is possible to prevent postpartum depression using psychological and psychosocial interventions. To do this they examined randomised controlled trials which compared the effectiveness of these interventions to usual care, delivered either before or after childbirth.

The review also tried to determine the characteristics of the most successful interventions, and whether interventions were more effective in the subgroup of women at high risk of developing postpartum depression.

Methods

The studies examining the same intervention were examined for heterogeneity, and this was taken into account when determining overall outcomes

The studies examining the same intervention were examined for heterogeneity, and this was taken into account when determining overall outcomes

A comprehensive literature search for randomised controlled trials was performed.  Sources included the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, MEDLINE, EMBASE, hand searching of a further 74 journals, and the proceedings of major conferences. The studies were carefully assessed for bias by two blind, independent reviewers – including methods of allocation of women to intervention groups, assessor blinding, and selective reporting bias. The studies examining the same intervention were examined for heterogeneity, and this was taken into account when determining overall outcomes.

They identified twenty-eight randomised controlled trials of acceptable quality (‘good to excellent’), involving almost 17,000 women, which compared a psychosocial or psychological intervention compared with usual care before or after childbirth.

The effectiveness of interventions was presented in two ways – either a risk ratio (RR), in the case of categorical data (e.g. depressed versus non-depressed) or a standardised mean difference, in cases where scores were taken on various questionnaires (e.g. the Beck Depression Inventory).

Results

Women who received any psychological or psychosocial intervention had a 22% reduction in their chance of developing post-partum depression

Women who received any psychological or psychosocial intervention had a 22% reduction in their chance of developing post-partum depression

  • Firstly, they found that women who received any psychological or psychosocial intervention had a 22% reduction in their chance of developing post-partum depression compared with those who received standard care (average RR 0.78, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.66 to 0.93; 20 trials, 14,727 women).
  • Subgroup analysis found that the most effective types of intervention were intensive, individualised postpartum home visits, lay (peer)-based telephone support, and interpersonal psychotherapy. It was also found that interventions that were initiated in the postpartum period were also effective.  Individual and group-based interventions were found to have similar effectiveness.
  • Selecting women for intervention based on the presence of risk factors for the development of postpartum depression decreased the onset of postpartum depression by 34% (RR 0.66, 95% CI 0.50 to 0.88; eight trials, 1853 women).
  • There was limited evidence on the comparative effectiveness of professionally-delivered versus lay-based interventions, and for interventions that were delivered as a one-off or on multiple occasions.

Conclusions

People delivering these interventions don’t need to have large portions of the alphabet after their names to make a difference to the wellbeing of women post childbirth

People don’t need to have large portions of the alphabet after their names to make a difference to the wellbeing of women post childbirth

The overall conclusion presented in this review is that even in an era of increasing complexity and in depth biological understanding of mental illness, good, old-fashioned phone calls to ask ‘how are you going?’ still have a big impact on the well-being of women in the postpartum period.

Interventions don’t need to be complicated or expensive – phone calls work well, group based interventions are as effective as individual attention, and it would seem that people delivering these interventions don’t need to have large portions of the alphabet after their names to make a difference to the wellbeing of women post childbirth.

This is a good quality review of the best available evidence from clinical research. The authors found that there is strong evidence to recommend implementing several interventions for the prevention of postpartum depression:

  • Intensive home visits by nurses
  • Flexible postpartum care by midwives
  • Postpartum peer based telephone support
  • Interpersonal psychotherapy.

On the other hand, the reviewers did not find enough support in the literature to recommend implementation of other interventions such as:

  • Antenatal and postnatal classes
  • Postpartum lay home visits
  • Early postpartum follow up
  • Continuity of care models
  • In-hospital psychological debriefing
  • Cognitive behavioural therapy

It may also be more beneficial and feasible to target at risk mothers rather than all women post-childbirth.

Could interpersonal psychotherapy be provided over the phone or over the internet and still be as effective?

Could interpersonal psychotherapy be provided over the phone or over the internet and still be as effective?

There are still questions that remain – what is the component of psychosocial interventions that actually reduces postpartum depression? What should be the role of a postpartum depression screening tool – is early detection the key to determining who should get interventions? Could interpersonal psychotherapy be provided over the phone or over the internet and still be as effective? The authors also recommend further research into the effectiveness of lay based interventions to confirm findings as to its efficacy.

Links

Dennis CL, Dowswell T. Psychosocial and psychological interventions for preventing postpartum depression. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2013, Issue 2. Art. No.: CD001134. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD001134.pub3.

Gaynes BN, Gavin N, Meltzer-Brody S, Lohr K, Swinson T, Gartlehner G, et al.Perinatal depression: prevalence,screening accuracy, and screening outcomes. 2005

O’Hara M, Swain A. Rates and risk of postpartum depression – a meta-analysis. International Review of Psychiatry 1996;8:37–54. [Abstract]

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