Research reportCounselling of postnatal depression: A controlled study on a population based Swedish sample
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Perinatal mental health counselling programme: A scoping review
2023, Patient Education and CounselingCitation Excerpt :The results showed significant improvements in the intervention group for post-traumatic stress disorder, depression symptoms, and anxiety. This is in agreement with the study by Wickberg and Hwang [37], who demonstrated the effectiveness of counselling in women with postpartum depression undergoing no other treatment, corroborating the results of Holden et al. [38], who suggested that counselling is effective in postpartum depression and likely to be implemented in primary health care. According to Costa et al. [29], psychoeducational interventions make pregnant women less likely to develop postpartum depression.
Negative effects of psychotherapies for adult depression: A meta-analysis of deterioration rates
2018, Journal of Affective DisordersImplementation of the Alarm Distress Baby Scale as a universal screening instrument in primary care: feasibility, acceptability, and predictors of professionals’ adherence to guidelines
2018, International Journal of Nursing StudiesCitation Excerpt :The American Academy of Pediatrics cautions that without systematic use of a validated screening tool, children at risk will be missed. This is consistent with results from other screening studies, not limited to the infant mental health domain, that have demonstrated that formal screening programs are far more effective than general health surveillance (Evins et al., 2000; Miller et al., 2011; Wickberg and Hwang, 1996). However, when formal screening programs have been established, they are often not effective, and implementation studies have reported very low screening prevalence rates, despite recommendations for universal screening (Rice et al., 2014; King et al., 2010; Sand et al., 2005).
A Nurse-Based Model of Psychosocial Support for Emotionally Distressed Mothers of Infants in the NICU
2018, JOGNN - Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, and Neonatal NursingCitation Excerpt :In general, a single LV session includes a greeting, debriefing about the previous visit, updates on present issues, discussion of current concerns, a summary, and scheduling the next visit or concluding the visits (Chuffo Siewert et al., 2015). In the United Kingdom, considerable empirical support garnered through several randomized controlled trials (Cooper, Murray, Wilson, & Romaniuk, 2003; Holden et al., 1989; Morrell et al., 2009; Wickberg & Hwang, 1996) prompted the National Institute of Clinical Excellence to recommend LV as an evidence-based treatment for mild to moderate postnatal depression (British Psychological Society, 2007). In a program of research directed by the second author, LV was imported to the Midwestern United States and proved to be a feasible way to deliver a first-line depression treatment approach to low-income mothers who receive home visiting services (Segre, Stasik, O'Hara, & Arndt, 2010).
The relationship between negative household events and depressive symptoms: Evidence from South African longitudinal data
2017, Journal of Affective DisordersCitation Excerpt :There is very little institutional support to help affected household members work through negative events such as illness and death. In the absence of such support, depressive symptoms are likely to endure for longer (Wickberg and Hwang, 1996; Hunkeler et al., 2006). This analysis adds to the emergent developing country literature on this topic by examining the relationship between negative household events and vulnerability to depression amongst a representative sample of South African adults observed over a four-year period from 2008 to 2012, using a three-wave longitudinal data set.
Psychological treatment of perinatal depression: a meta-analysis
2023, Psychological Medicine