Video feedback for young babies and maternal perinatal mental illness: intervention adaptation, feasibility and acceptability.

Journal: Journal of reproductive and infant psychology

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Affiliated Institutions:  Department of Health Services Research and Management, City University of London, London, UK. Perinatal Mental Health Service, Central & North West London NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK. Perinatal Mental Health Service, East London NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK. Perinatal Mental Health Service, Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK. Department of Psychological Interventions, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK.

Abstract summary 

We aimed to adapt, pilot and explore experiences of receiving and delivering the video feedback intervention for positive parenting (VIPP) for 2 to 6 month old babies, mothers experiencing moderate to severe perinatal mental health difficulties and perinatal mental health clinicians.The VIPP intervention was adapted to include developmentally appropriate activities and developmental psychoeducation for 2 to 6 month olds, alongside psychoeducation on emotion regulation, and then piloted in 14 mothers experiencing moderate to severe perinatal mental health difficulties (registration ISRCTN64237883). Observational and self-reported pre-post outcome data on parenting and parent-infant mental health was collected, and post-intervention qualitative interviews were conducted with participating mothers and clinicians.Consent (67%), intervention completion (79%) and follow-up rates (93%) were high. Effect sizes on pre-post outcome measures indicated large improvements in parenting confidence and perceptions of the parent-infant relationship, and a medium-size improvement in maternal sensitivity. In qualitative interviews, clinicians and mothers described how mothers' initial anxieties about being filmed were allayed through receiving positive and strengths-focussed feedback, boosting their self-confidence, and that the video feedback facilitated identification of young babies' subtle behavioural cues and moments of mother-infant connection. Streamlining the information provided on maternal emotion regulation, and allowing increased use of clinical judgement to tailor intervention delivery, were suggested to optimise intervention feasibility and acceptability.It is feasible and acceptable to implement VIPP with very young babies and their mothers experiencing perinatal mental health difficulties. A fully powered randomised controlled trial is required to establish intervention efficacy.

Authors & Co-authors:  Barnicot Stevens Robinson Labovitch Ballman Miele Lawn Sundaresh Iles

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations : 
Authors :  9
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1080/02646838.2024.2322636
SSN : 1469-672X
Study Population
Mothers
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
Infant mental health;Sensitivity;Video feedback;parent-infant intervention;perinatal mental health
Study Design
Study Approach
Qualitative
Country of Study
Publication Country
England