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RECRUITINGINTERVENTIONAL

OBWELL: Innovative Psychotherapeutic Intervention to Treat Postpartum Depression

OBWELL: Evaluating the Effectiveness of an Innovative Psychotherapeutic Intervention to Treat Postpartum Depression Among High-Risk Mothers

Important: This information is not medical advice. Talk to your doctor about whether a clinical trial is right for you.

About This Trial

Postpartum Depression (PPD) is defined as depression that occurs after childbirth, with intense symptoms that last longer than "baby blues". PPD differs greatly from "baby blues", a term used to describe the typical sadness, worry and tiredness that women experience after childbirth, which often resolves within a week or two on its own. The symptoms of PPD interfere with many aspects of daily living and can have unhealthy short-term and long-term outcomes, both for the mother and baby. One-third of women in the U.S. with PPD are identified in clinical settings, yet only half of those begin psychotherapy treatment. Unfortunately, mothers whose newborns are in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) are at high risk for developing PPD, necessitating early identification and evidence-based treatment. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and interpersonal therapy (IPT) are the two most effective psychotherapy treatments for PPD, yet no randomized controlled clinical trials were found that directly compared the two types of treatment or determined whether combining the two approaches is more helpful for PPD than either approach alone. This clinical trial aims to compare the effectiveness of a 4-week intervention of either CBT or IPT for PPD in NICU mothers and to determine whether a sequential 8-week intervention (IPT then CBT, or CBT then IPT) is more beneficial.

Who May Be Eligible (Plain English)

Who May Qualify: - Mother of NICU infant - Older than age 18 - English-speaking - Gave birth more than 24 hours ago and less than 12 months prior to enrollment - Depression as assessed by: Current/Prior diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder OR EPDS score above 10 OR EPDS score below 10 AND Endorsement of "sometimes" or "often" on item #10 on the EPDS\* ("I have had thoughts of harming myself") Who Should NOT Join This Trial: - A diagnosis of Substance Dependency or Substance Use - Acute suicidal or infanticidal ideation - Current psychosis - Medical history of cognitive impairment - Infant death of current NICU admission - Marked non-compliance with intervention (e.g, non-attendance of more than one session during a 4-week intervention or failure to complete study assessments), - Are in medical treatment that would prevent participation (i.e., medical treatment that requires inpatient hospitalization and thus would prevent participation of study visits.) Always talk to your doctor about whether this trial is right for you.

Original Eligibility Criteria

View original clinical language
Inclusion Criteria: * Mother of NICU infant * Older than age 18 * English-speaking * Gave birth more than 24 hours ago and less than 12 months prior to enrollment * Depression as assessed by: Current/Prior diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder OR EPDS score above 10 OR EPDS score below 10 AND Endorsement of "sometimes" or "often" on item #10 on the EPDS\* ("I have had thoughts of harming myself") Exclusion Criteria: * A diagnosis of Substance Dependency or Substance Use * Acute suicidal or infanticidal ideation * Current psychosis * Medical history of cognitive impairment * Infant death of current NICU admission * Marked non-compliance with intervention (e.g, non-attendance of more than one session during a 4-week intervention or failure to complete study assessments), * Are in medical treatment that would prevent participation (i.e., medical treatment that requires inpatient hospitalization and thus would prevent participation of study visits.)

Treatments Being Tested

BEHAVIORAL

Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) psychotherapy group/telehealth

Type of psychotherapy. CBT focuses on identifying and changing unhelpful beliefs and behavioral patterns that lead to negative emotions (e.g., depression, anxiety, grief, shame) in order to break the emotion-thought-behavior cycle

BEHAVIORAL

Interpersonal therapy (IPT) psychotherapy group/telehealth

Type of psychotherapy. IPT focuses on improving interpersonal communication and deficits, processing grief, and role transitions

Locations (1)

Hackensack University Medical Center
Hackensack, New Jersey, United States