Abstract

Prospective parents widely use education to gain information about, e.g., labour and parenting skills. It is unknown if antenatal education in small classes is more beneficial for parenting stress and parenting alliance compared with other types of antenatal education. In the present randomised trial, we examined the effect of antenatal education in small classes versus auditorium-based lectures on perceived stress, parenting stress, and parenting alliance. A total of 1,766 pregnant women were randomised to receive: antenatal education in small classes three times in pregnancy and one time after delivery, each session lasted 2.5 hours, versus standard care consisting of two times two hours auditorium-based lectures. Previous analysis of the primary outcome showed no difference between intervention and control group. Here we conduct an exploratory analysis of three secondary outcomes. Effects of the interventions on parents’ global feelings of stress at 37 weeks gestation and nine weeks and six months postpartum and parenting stress nine weeks and six months postpartum were examined using linear regression analyses and mixed models with repeated measurements. The effect on parenting alliance six months postpartum was examined using the non-parametric Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Antenatal education in small classes had a small beneficial main effect on global feelings of stress six months postpartum and a statistically significant interaction between time and group favoring antenatal education in small classes. The P values of intervention effects on parenting stress and parenting alliance were all larger than the threshold value (0.05).

Highlights

  • Antenatal education aims to help prospective parents prepare for childbirth and parenthood

  • Antenatal education may offer a suitable and non-stigmatising setting for promoting parenting alliance, social support, and confidence in ability to cope with the demands of parenthood, thereby reducing parenting stress and promoting wellbeing

  • Perceived Stress Scale: We found no statistically significant difference in mean values of square root PSS between the two groups at follow-up time points were 86.1% (FU1) (MD: -0.06, 95% confidence intervals (95% CI): -0.14 to 0.02, p = 0.13) or FU2 (MD: -0.06, 95% CI: -0.15 to 0.04, p = 0.23) in the linear regression analyses

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this article is to present the effects of the experimental intervention in the NEWBORN trial on the secondary outcomes: maternal global feelings of stress, parenting stress, and parenting alliance. The purpose of this article is to examine the effect of the NEWBORN programme as inspiration for the planning and selection of outcomes in future trials

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