Background: We aim to examine the effectiveness of Learning Through Play and Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (LTP+CaCBT), a culturally appropriate psychosocial intervention to address postnatal depression among Nigerian women and improve the well-being of their children. Women of reproductive age (ages 16 to 49) comprise about 60 million of Nigeria's 230 million people. About 30% of these mothers experience postnatal depression. The global health challenge our research addresses is that one in three women worldwide experience postnatal depression and suicidal thoughts after childbirth, with long-term negative consequences on their children and families. Since 30% of Nigerian mothers suffer from postnatal depression, they have significant risks of transferring intergenerational mental health problems to their children. Over 250 million children are at risk of lacking developmental support in low- or middle-income countries, including Nigeria, due to postnatal depression, and this limits the children from reaching their full potential in life. The treatment gap for postnatal depression in Nigeria is huge due to a shortage of mental health specialists. Culturally appropriate, nonspecialist-delivered interventions are very limited in Nigeria. Our proposal aims to address this gap in treating postnatal depression using non-specialists called Indigenous Community Health Workers (CHWs), who are more culturally knowledgeable, as the World Health Organisation recommended in their task-shifting strategy. Methods: We will evaluate the treatment, costs and implementation outcomes of LTP+CaCBT with 432 depressed mothers. Eligible participants (mother-child pairs) will be randomly selected to receive LTP+CaCBT and Treatment As Usual (TAU) or TAU alone. Our LTP+CaCBT intervention is a manualised 12-session (90-minute each) of mother-child play activities delivered in-person by CHWs under the supervision of clinical psychologists/psychiatrists. The eligible mothers (aged 16-49 years who have children between ages 0-36 months) will be assessed for depression before the intervention and then again at 4 months and 6 months afterwards. We will conduct interviews and focus group discussions to understand participants' and CHWs' experiences of the intervention
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
432
LTP+CaCBT has two components. LTP is underpinned by Piaget's theory of cognitive development and Bowlby's theory of attachment. The CBT component uses active listening techniques, changing negative thinking, and guided discovery (i.e., Socratic questioning style to gently probe for cultural beliefs on mental health and stimulate alternative positive thinking). This includes a culturally adapted pictorial calendar devised for women, depicting successive stages of child well-being from 0-3 years, with illustrations of mother-child play and other culturally relevant activities that promote healthy parenting and mother-child attachment.
TAU is the routine care currently available for the treatment of postnatal depression at the health care sites of intervention (e.g. diagnosis, management, antidepressant prescription and/or other forms of mental health care).
Change in postnatal depression is being assessed
Primary outcome measure would be assessed using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9)
Time frame: Change is being assessed from baseline, end of intervention at 4 and at 6 months post-intervention
Change in postnatal anxiety is being assessed
Secondary outcome measure would be assessed using the Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD7) scale
Time frame: Change is being assessed from baseline, end of intervention at 4 and at 6 months post-intervention
Change in health-related quality of life is being assessed
Outcome measure would be assessed using the Health-related Quality of Life scale (EuroQoL-5 Dimensions)
Time frame: Change is being assessed from baseline, end of intervention at 4 and at 6 months post-intervention
Change in social support is being assessed
Outcome measures would be assessed using the Oslo Social Support Scale
Time frame: Change is being assessed from baseline, end of intervention at 4 and 6 months post-intervention
Change in service satisfaction is being assessed
Outcome measure would be assessed using the brief Verona Service Satisfaction Scale
Time frame: Change is being assessed from baseline, end of intervention at 4 and 6 months post-intervention
Change in child physio-emotional development is being assessed
Outcome measure would be assessed using the Ages and Stages Social-Emotional Questionnaire
Time frame: Change is being assessed from baseline, end of intervention at 4 and 6 months post-intervention
Change in mother-child attachedment is being assessed
Outcome measures would be assessed using the Maternal Attachment Inventory
Time frame: Change is being assessed from baseline, end of intervention at 4 and 6 months post-intervention
Change in service satisfaction is being assessed
Outcome measure would be assessed using the brief Verona Service Satisfaction Scale
Time frame: Change is being assessed at end of intervention at 4 months post-intervention
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