The primary objective of this study is to determine the extent to which a psychosocial intervention combining cognitive-behavioral treatment for depression with child development information and social support reduces depressive symptomatology and risks of impairments in maternal interactions with infants among 300 low SES Puerto Rican (n = 75), Dominican (n = 75), and African-American (n = 150) women during pregnancy and early postpartum receiving prenatal services at inner-city primary care clinics of a major medical center. Using a randomized, controlled clinical trial, the aims of the study are to determine: (1) the impact of the psychosocial home and primary care intervention on women's depression symptomatology, sensitivity and responsivity to their infants, and sense of parental competency when their infants are 3-months old compared to standard clinic services; (2) the possible moderating effects of specific psychosocial factors and demographic variables on the effectiveness of the psychosocial intervention; (3) how women's prenatal care utilization psychosocial and demographic factors to impact on perinatal depression. The experimental group will consist of pregnant depressed women receiving the psychosocial intervention. A comparison group of pregnant depressed women will receive the standard services offered by their health care centers. A second comparison group of non-depressed pregnant women will also receive standard services.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Resource-Related Research Projects (R24)
Project #
1R24MH057936-01
Application #
2456491
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZMH1-CRB-W (02))
Project Start
1998-04-01
Project End
2003-01-31
Budget Start
1998-04-01
Budget End
1999-01-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1998
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Fordham University
Department
Type
Schools of Social Work
DUNS #
City
Bronx
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10458
Boyd, Rhonda C; Zayas, Luis H; McKee, M Diane (2006) Mother-infant interaction, life events and prenatal and postpartum depressive symptoms among urban minority women in primary care. Matern Child Health J 10:139-48
Zayas, Luis H; McKee, M Diane; Jankowski, Katherine R B (2004) Adapting psychosocial intervention research to urban primary care environments: a case example. Ann Fam Med 2:504-8
Zayas, Luis H; Cunningham, Maddy; McKee, M Diane et al. (2002) Depression and negative life events among pregnant African-American and Hispanic women. Womens Health Issues 12:16-22
Cunningham, Maddy; Zayas, Luis H (2002) Reducing depression in pregnancy: designing multimodal interventions. Soc Work 47:114-23
Mckee, M D; Cunningham, M; Jankowski, K R et al. (2001) Health-related functional status in pregnancy: relationship to depression and social support in a multi-ethnic population. Obstet Gynecol 97:988-93
Malgady, R G; Zayas, L H (2001) Cultural and linguistic considerations in psychodiagnosis with Hispanics: the need for an empirically informed process model. Soc Work 46:39-49