Abstract

BackgroundYearly, approximately 25,000 US women experience stillbirth and African American women have a 2.2 fold increased risk of stillbirth compared with white women. After stillbirth, women are subject to a sevenfold increased risk of post-traumatic stress compared with women after a live-birth. This paper presents findings from phase one of a National Institutes of Health funded, two-phase feasibility study to examine an online yoga intervention to reduce symptoms of post-traumatic stress in mothers after stillbirth. An iterative design was used to (1) inform the development of the online yoga intervention and (2) inform recruitment strategies to enroll minority women into phase two.MethodsTen mothers (N = 5 stillbirth moms with no yoga experience, N = 5 nonstillbirth moms with yoga experience) participated in a series of online yoga videos (N = 30) and were assessed for self-compassion (SC) and emotional regulation (ER) before and after each video. An independent group of five minority women who had experienced stillbirth were interviewed about cultural barriers to recruitment and perceptions/opinions of yoga. A mean was calculated for SC and ER scores for each video at pre- and post-time points. The percent change of the mean difference between pre-post SC and ER scores were used to select videos for phase two. Videos with a negative change score or that had a 0% change on SC or ER were not used. A combination of deductive and inductive coding was used to organize the interview data, generate categories, and develop themes.ResultsFive of the 30 tested yoga videos were not used. An additional 12 videos were developed, filmed, and used in the prescription for phase two. Topics from interview findings included perceived benefits/barriers of and interest in yoga, preferred yoga environment, suggested recruitment methods, content of recruitment material, and recommended incentives.ConclusionsOnline yoga may be beneficial for improving emotional regulation and self-compassion, but further testing is needed. Additionally, minority women express interest in online yoga but suggest that researchers apply culturally specific strategies regarding methods, content of material, and incentives to recruit minority women into a study.

Highlights

  • Stillbirth is devastating and life changing [1] and has a significant emotional and mental health impact on women and their families

  • Women who participated in the engagement of the yoga videos were on average 36 years old and primarily White, European-American, or Caucasian (90%; N = 9)

  • Race categories are not Filming of additional yoga videos As mentioned above, based on feedback from a beta-test of an online yoga intervention in women who had experienced stillbirth, we developed and filmed yoga videos using expertise from the yoga biomechanist/ educator and the PhD trained researcher

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Summary

Introduction

Stillbirth is devastating and life changing [1] and has a significant emotional and mental health impact on women and their families. The risk of stillbirth is greater for ethnic minorities with African American women having a 2.2 fold increased risk of stillbirth compared with white women [4]. 44% of mothers who have stillborn babies exhibit symptoms of post-traumatic stress, which may last anywhere from 2 months to 18 years [8,9,10,11]. Approximately 25,000 US women experience stillbirth and African American women have a 2.2 fold increased risk of stillbirth compared with white women. Women are subject to a sevenfold increased risk of post-traumatic stress compared with women after a live-birth. This paper presents findings from phase one of a National Institutes of Health funded, two-phase feasibility study to examine an online yoga intervention to reduce symptoms of post-traumatic stress in mothers after stillbirth. An iterative design was used to (1) inform the development of the online yoga intervention and (2) inform recruitment strategies to enroll minority women into phase two

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