Perinatal mental health services in pregnancy and the year after birth: the ESMI research programme including RCT
- PMID: 35700306
- Bookshelf ID: NBK581242
- DOI: 10.3310/CCHT9881
Perinatal mental health services in pregnancy and the year after birth: the ESMI research programme including RCT
Excerpt
Background: It is unclear how best to identify and treat women with mental disorders in pregnancy and the year after birth (i.e. the perinatal period).
Objectives: (1) To investigate how best to identify depression at antenatal booking [work package (WP) 1]. (2) To estimate the prevalence of mental disorders in early pregnancy (WP1). (3) To develop and examine the efficacy of a guided self-help intervention for mild to moderate antenatal depression delivered by psychological well-being practitioners (WP1). (4) To examine the psychometric properties of the perinatal VOICE (Views On Inpatient CarE) measure of service satisfaction (WP3). (5) To examine the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of services for women with acute severe postnatal mental disorders (WPs 1–3). (6) To investigate women’s and partners’/significant others’ experiences of different types of care (WP2).
Design: Objectives 1 and 2 – a cross-sectional survey stratified by response to Whooley depression screening questions. Objective 3 – an exploratory randomised controlled trial. Objective 4 – an exploratory factor analysis, including test–retest reliability and validity assessed by association with the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire contemporaneous satisfaction scores. Objective 5 – an observational cohort study using propensity scores for the main analysis and instrumental variable analysis using geographical distance to mother and baby unit. Objective 6 – a qualitative study.
Setting: English maternity services and generic and specialist mental health services for pregnant and postnatal women.
Participants: Staff and users of mental health and maternity services.
Interventions: Guided self-help, mother and baby units and generic care.
Main outcome measures: The following measures were evaluated in WP1(i) – specificity, sensitivity, positive predictive value, likelihood ratio, acceptability and population prevalence estimates. The following measures were evaluated in WP1(ii) – participant recruitment rate, attrition and adverse events. The following measure was evaluated in WP2 – experiences of care. The following measures were evaluated in WP3 – psychometric indices for perinatal VOICE and the proportion of participants readmitted to acute care in the year after discharge.
Results: WP1(i) – the population prevalence estimate was 11% (95% confidence interval 8% to 14%) for depression and 27% (95% confidence interval 22% to 32%) for any mental disorder in early pregnancy. The diagnostic accuracy of two depression screening questions was as follows: a weighted sensitivity of 0.41, a specificity of 0.95, a positive predictive value of 0.45, a negative predictive value of 0.93 and a likelihood ratio (positive) of 8.2. For the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, the diagnostic accuracy was as follows: a weighted sensitivity of 0.59, a specificity of 0.94, a positive predictive value of 0.52, a negative predictive value of 0.95 and a likelihood ratio (positive) of 9.8. Most women reported that asking about depression at the antenatal booking appointment was acceptable, although this was reported as being less acceptable for women with mental disorders and/or experiences of abuse. Cost-effectiveness analysis suggested that both the Whooley depression screening questions and the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale were more cost-effective than with the Whooley depression screening questions followed by the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale or no-screen option. WP1(ii) – 53 women with depression in pregnancy were randomised. Twenty-six women received modified guided self-help [with 18 (69%) women attending four or more sessions] and 27 women received usual care. Three women were lost to follow-up (follow-up for primary outcome: 92%). At 14 weeks post randomisation, women receiving guided self-help reported fewer depressive symptoms than women receiving usual care (adjusted effect size −0.64, 95% confidence interval −1.30 to 0.06). Costs and quality-adjusted life-years were similar, resulting in a 50% probability of guided self-help being cost-effective compared with usual care at National Institute for Health and Care Excellence cost per quality-adjusted life-year thresholds. The slow recruitment rate means that a future definitive larger trial is not feasible. WP2 – qualitative findings indicate that women valued clinicians with specialist perinatal expertise across all services, but for some women generic services were able to provide better continuity of care. Involvement of family members and care post discharge from acute services were perceived as poor across services, but there was also ambivalence among some women about increasing family involvement because of a complex range of factors. WP3(i) – for the perinatal VOICE, measures from exploratory factor analysis suggested that two factors gave an adequate fit (comparative fit index = 0.97). Items loading on these two dimensions were (1) those concerning aspects of the service relating to the care of the mother and (2) those relating to care of the baby. The factors were positively correlated (0.49; p < 0.0001). Total scores were strongly associated with service (with higher satisfaction for mother and baby units, 2 degrees of freedom; p < 0.0001) and with the ‘gold standard’ Client Service Questionnaire total score (test–retest intraclass correlation coefficient 0.784, 95% confidence interval 0.643 to 0.924; p < 0.0001). WP3(ii) – 263 of 279 women could be included in the primary analysis, which shows that the odds of being readmitted to acute care was 0.95 times higher for women who were admitted to a mother and baby unit than for those not admitted to a mother and baby unit (0.95, 95% confidence interval 0.86 to 1.04; p = 0.29). Sensitivity analysis using an instrumental variable found a markedly more significant effect of admission to mother and baby units (p < 0.001) than the primary analysis. Mother and baby units were not found to be cost-effective at 1 month post discharge because of the costs of care in a mother and baby unit. Cost-effectiveness advantages may exist if the cost of mother and baby units is offset by savings from reduced readmissions in the longer term.
Limitations: Policy and service changes had an impact on recruitment. In observational studies, residual confounding is likely.
Conclusions: Services adapted for the perinatal period are highly valued by women and may be more effective than generic services. Mother and baby units have a low probability of being cost-effective in the short term, although this may vary in the longer term.
Future work: Future work should include examination of how to reduce relapses, including in after-care following discharge, and how better to involve family members.
Trial registration: This trial is registered as ISRCTN83768230 and as study registration UKCRN ID 16403.
Funding: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full in Programme Grants for Applied Research; Vol. 10, No. 5. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
Copyright © 2022 Howard et al. This work was produced by Howard et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This is an Open Access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0 licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaption in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. For attribution the title, original author(s), the publication source – NIHR Journals Library, and the DOI of the publication must be cited.
Sections
- Plain English summary
- Scientific summary
- SYNOPSIS
- Work package 1(i): identification and prevalence of depression and other antenatal mental disorders – WENDY
- Work package 1(ii): the DAWN study
- Work package 2: STACEY
- Work package 3(i): postnatal mental health services for women with acute severe mental disorders – evaluation of a quantitative measure to assess the acceptability and experience of perinatal services for acute severe illnesses from a service user perspective
- Work package 3(ii): the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of psychiatric mother and baby units compared with acute general wards and crisis resolution teams (the ESMI mother and baby unit study)
- Conclusions from the programme
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix 1. Work package 1(i): WENDY recruitment chart
- Appendix 2. Work package 1(i): WENDY economic modelling methods – cost-effectiveness of screening tools for identifying depression in early pregnancy (a decision tree model)
- Appendix 3. Work package 1(i): WENDY economic results
- Appendix 4. Work package 1(ii): DAWN recruitment chart
- Appendix 5. Work package 3(i): perinatal VOICE – expanded methods and results
- Appendix 6. Work package 3(ii): measures used for data collection in the ESMI MBU study
- Appendix 7. Work package 3(ii): ESMI MBU – list of participating trusts (in alphabetical order)
- Appendix 8. Work package 3(ii): ESMI MBU geographical methods
- Appendix 9. Work package 3(ii): ESMI MBU propensity score variables and post-estimation testing
- Appendix 10. Work package 3(ii): ESMI MBU recruitment chart
- Appendix 11. Work package 3(ii): threshold assessment grid severity ratings
- Appendix 12. Work package 3(ii): ESMI MBU sensitivity analyses
- Appendix 13. Work package 3(ii): ESMI MBU economic evaluation methods – the cost-effectiveness of psychiatric mother and baby units compared with acute general wards and crisis resolution teams
- Appendix 14. Work package 3(ii): ESMI MBU economic evaluation results
- List of abbreviations
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