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Effectiveness of a Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education pilot study on maternal self-efficacy and fear of childbirth.

Journal of midwifery & women's health
January 1, 2014
Jean Byrne et al. (5 authors)
Clinical TrialJournal ArticleHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to test the feasibility and effectiveness of Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE) in reducing fear of birth, anxiety, and stress while improving maternal self-efficacy.

Results Summary

The study found statistically significant improvements in childbirth self-efficacy and fear of childbirth, with large effect sizes. Improvements in anxiety were significant at postnatal follow-up, while other variables like mindfulness and stress showed less robust improvements.

Population

Pregnant women (18-28 weeks' gestation) and their support companions in an Australian community setting.

Effective Dosage

Weekly group sessions over 8 weeks (specific mindfulness dosage not detailed).

Duration

8 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (14)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
decrease
fear of birth
pregnant women
-
aimed to reduce
#1
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
decrease
anxiety
pregnant women
-
aimed to reduce
#2
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
decrease
stress
pregnant women
-
aimed to reduce
#3
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
increase
maternal self-efficacy
pregnant women
-
aimed to improve
#4
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
increase
childbirth self-efficacy
pregnant women
-
statistically significant improvements and large effect sizes were observed for
#5
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
decrease
fear of childbirth
pregnant women
-
statistically significant improvements and large effect sizes were observed for
#6
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
increase
depression
pregnant women
underpowered
improvements in
#7
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
increase
mindfulness
pregnant women
underpowered
improvements in
#8
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
increase
birth outcome expectations
pregnant women
underpowered
improvements in
#9
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
decrease
anxiety
pregnant women
-
significant improvements were found in
#10
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
increase
mindfulness
pregnant women
significant at a less conservative alpha level
improvements in
#11
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
decrease
stress
pregnant women
significant at a less conservative alpha level
improvements in
#12
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
decrease
fear of birth
pregnant women
significant at a less conservative alpha level
improvements in
#13
Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE)
increase
women's sense of control and confidence in giving birth
women
-
was associated with improvements in
#14
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: This pilot study tested the feasibility and effectiveness of using Mindfulness-Based Childbirth Education (MBCE), a novel integration of mindfulness meditation and skills-based childbirth education, for mental health promotion with pregnant women. The MBCE protocol aimed to reduce fear of birth, anxiety, and stress and improve maternal self-efficacy. This pilot study also aimed to determine the acceptability and feasibility of the MBCE protocol. METHODS: A single-arm pilot study of the MBCE intervention using a repeated-measures design was used to analyze data before and after the MBCE intervention to determine change trends with key outcome variables: mindfulness; depression, anxiety, and stress; childbirth self-efficacy; and fear of childbirth. Pregnant women (18-28 weeks' gestation) and their support companions attended weekly MBCE group sessions over 8 weeks in an Australian community setting. RESULTS: Of the 18 women who began and completed the intervention, missing data allowed for complete data from 12 participants to be analyzed. Statistically significant improvements and large effect sizes were observed for childbirth self-efficacy and fear of childbirth. Improvements in depression, mindfulness, and birth outcome expectations were underpowered. At postnatal follow-up significant improvements were found in anxiety, whereas improvements in mindfulness, stress, and fear of birth were significant at a less conservative alpha level. DISCUSSION: This pilot study demonstrated that a blended mindfulness and skills-based childbirth education intervention was acceptable to women and was associated with improvements in women's sense of control and confidence in giving birth. Previous findings that low self-efficacy and high childbirth fear are linked to greater labor pain, stress reactivity, and trauma suggest the observed improvements in these variables have important implications for improving maternal mental health and associated child health outcomes. Ways in which these outcomes can be achieved through improved childbirth education are discussed.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultAnxietyAustraliaDelivery, ObstetricDepressionFearFemaleHumansLabor PainMindfulnessParturitionPatient SatisfactionPilot ProjectsPregnancyPregnant PeoplePrenatal EducationProgram EvaluationSelf EfficacyStress, Psychological
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality65/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations91
Citations/Year8.3
Relative Citation Ratio5.46
NIH Percentile94%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score1.60
Normalized Score0.63
Related Supplements
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