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Which preventive interventions effectively enhance depressed mothers' sensitivity? A meta-analysis†

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TLDR
It is confirmed that depressed mothers' sensitivity can be improved by preventive intervention and suggested that baby massage may be an effective intervention method to evoke short-term changes in maternal sensitivity, although it is unclear whether these changes are maintained over time.
Abstract
Improving depressed mothers' sensitivity is assumed to be a key element in preventing adverse outcomes for children of such mothers. This meta-analysis examines the short-term effectiveness of preventive interventions in terms of enhancing depressed mothers' sensitivity toward their child and investigates what type of intervention is most effective. Thirteen interventions, reported in 10 controlled outcome studies, met the inclusion criteria (N = 918). Meta-analytic results showed a small to medium, significant mean effect size (g = 0.32) with large variation in individual effect sizes (-0.56-1.76). Interventions including baby massage were highly effective in improving maternal sensitivity (g = 0.85). In contrast, individual therapy for the mother proved ineffective in terms of improving maternal sensitivity (g = -0.00). Two other significant predictors of greater effect sizes were the inclusion of a support group and the use of a higher number of intervention methods; however, the significance of these results was largely accounted for by one single study. Our meta-analysis confirms that depressed mothers' sensitivity can be improved by preventive intervention and suggests that baby massage may be an effective intervention method to evoke short-term changes in maternal sensitivity. It is unclear whether these changes are maintained over time.

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Effects of perinatal mental disorders on the fetus and child

TL;DR: Evidence for associations between parental disorders and offspring outcomes from fetal development to adolescence in high-income, middle- income, and low-income countries is summarized and the need for early identification of those parents at high risk and for more early interventions and prevention research is underlined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Benefits of a bedtime routine in young children: Sleep, development, and beyond

TL;DR: A conceptual model and empirical evidence are presented to support a nightly bedtime routine as a key factor in the promotion of not only healthy sleep, but also of broad development and wellbeing in early childhood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Association between maternal depression and maternal sensitivity from birth to 12 months: a meta-analysis

TL;DR: The current meta-analysis quantified the magnitude of the association between depression and maternal sensitivity, defined broadly as timely, contingent, and appropriate responding to infants’ cues, from birth to 12 months, and suggested that clinical levels of depression may pose a particular threat to sensitive parenting.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disruption to the development of maternal responsiveness? The impact of prenatal depression on mother-infant interactions.

TL;DR: Using longitudinal data from over 900 mother-infant pairs in a UK birth cohort (ALSPAC), it is found that women with high depressive symptom scores during mid pregnancy, but NOT when their infants were 8 months, had a 30% increased risk of low maternal responsiveness when the infant was 12 months compared to women with consistently low depression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do preventive interventions for children of mentally ill parents work? Results of a systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: There is a dearth of high quality studies that effectively reduce the high risk of COPMI for the development of mental disorders, and higher study quality was associated with smaller effects.
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