Mindful moms: acceptability and impact of co-designed and digitally delivered video meditations for pregnant and parenting women with opioid use disorder
- PMID: 40248919
- PMCID: PMC12010645
- DOI: 10.1080/07853890.2025.2486585
Mindful moms: acceptability and impact of co-designed and digitally delivered video meditations for pregnant and parenting women with opioid use disorder
Abstract
Introduction: Perinatal opioid use disorder (OUD) remains a public health epidemic. Stress, anxiety and depression are disproportionately high among this population and are associated with poor recovery outcomes. Mindfulness interventions show promise for supporting recovery for women. This paper reports results of a pilot study to evaluate initial efficacy and acceptability of digitally delivered mindfulness meditation videos to reduce stress and promote mindfulness among women in recovery.
Methods: Women with lived experience of OUD were recruited from three outpatient programs that provided care to pregnant and parenting women with a history of opioid use in rural northern New England (2 maternity care settings that offered buprenorphine as part of their service menu and 1 academic substance use treatment setting). In a pre-post study design, participants were randomly assigned to receive four of 16 short meditation videos, each delivered by email in a survey link over a 2-week period (2 per week) Videos were co-designed in earlier work with representative end-users, guided by evidence-based mindfulness interventions. Assessment included the Perceived Stress Scale and the Mindfulness Attention Awareness Scale. Participants rated each video on usefulness, enjoyability, ability to lower anxiety, and intention to use in the future. Participants also provided open-ended feedback about the videos. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, paired t-tests, and generalized linear modeling.
Results: A total of 20 women, ages 24-36 years, completed the pilot study. Most participants (95%) were white and non-Hispanic, reflecting the rural region. Marginal mean perceived stress scores decreased significantly from 21.49 to 19.85 [p = 0.05, d = 0.43] and mean mindfulness scores increased significantly from 3.47 to 3.76 [p = 0.04, d = 0.45]. Overall, the meditation videos were rated as highly acceptable and useful and a majority (80%) indicated intention to use the meditations in the future.
Conclusion: Digitally delivered meditation videos were highly acceptable and useful to participants and the low dose intervention reduced stress and improved mindfulness. Findings inform directions for future research with larger samples to evaluate the effectiveness of this accessible digital intervention to support women in recovery and strategies for broadly implementing the intervention.
Keywords: Mindfulness; digital delivery; meditation; opioid use disorder; pregnant and parenting women; stress.
Plain language summary
A low dose of a digitally delivered meditation video intervention significantly reduced perceived stress and improved mindfulness in women with opioid use disorder.The meditation videos were highly acceptable and useful to participants and the digital implementation was demonstrated feasible.Participant feedback informed further refinements of meditation videos to promote engagement.The pilot study seeds a strong foundation from which to conduct larger, fully powered randomized controlled studies to evaluate effectiveness and implementation of a digital delivered meditation intervention to support recovery for women with opioid use disorder.
Conflict of interest statement
Neither of the authors (SL, DR) have financial or non-financial competing interests to report for this study.
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