Abstract

BackgroundPsychotherapy of mother-child dyads is an intervention which was developed to prevent maltreatment and negative children’s development. There is a lack of good-quality research investigating psychotherapeutic interventions and social care for mothers at high-risk living in Mother-Child Facilities in Germany. The present randomized controlled pilot trial (RCT) aimed to evaluate the need for parent-infant psychotherapy (PIP) and to explore its impact on the mother-infant relationship. Primary feasibility objectives were recruitment and attrition, with potential efficacy defined as the secondary feasibility objective.MethodsThis pilot RCT focused on (young) mothers with cumulative risk factors and their infants under 7 months of age living in Mother-Child Facilities. N=32 mother-child dyads were randomly allocated to PIP or Care as usual (CAU). Outcomes were assessed at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months of intervention. The primary potential efficacy outcome was maternal sensitivity. Secondary outcomes were maternal mental health problems, reflective functioning, parenting stress, personality organization, infant’s development, and attachment.ResultsAt baseline, all mothers showed low levels of emotional availability, but results revealed improvements in sensitivity, mental health problems, stress, and depressive symptomatology favoring PIP after 6 months. Positive developments in maternal sensitivity, a healthy aspect of mother-child interaction, were only found in the PIP group. Overall attrition was high at 6 months. Some evidence of fewer depressive symptoms and lower maternal distress after 6 months of PIP-intervention exists that did not reach significance.ConclusionFindings revealed improvements in the mother’s well-being for both groups, but PIP had a higher impact on the mother-child dyad. In sum, there is some evidence that PIP may represent an effective intervention offer besides the social and pedagogical support in these facilities, but further research is demanded.Trial registrationDRKS00022485 (retrospectively registered).

Highlights

  • Maternal risk factors like early motherhood, mental health problems, or trauma can lead to a lack of maternal sensitivity and reflective functioning up to a situation where mothers are unable to support the child sufficiently in coping with early developmental and maturing issues

  • The present feasibility study examines the potential efficacy of a dyadic parentinfant psychotherapy (PIP) with mothers at risk and their children with an age up to 7 months living in Mother-Child Facilities

  • Feasibility Motivation to participate and interest in the study were low and retention mostly sustained to ongoing contact and additional in-house support provided by the pedagogical stuff in the facilities

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Summary

Introduction

Maternal risk factors like early motherhood, mental health problems, or trauma can lead to a lack of maternal sensitivity and reflective functioning up to a situation where mothers are unable to support the child sufficiently in coping with early developmental and maturing issues. In high-risk populations, the cumulation of these factors bears a higher possibility of child’s adverse development and maltreatment. The present feasibility study examines the potential efficacy of a dyadic parentinfant psychotherapy (PIP) with (young) mothers at risk and their children with an age up to 7 months living in Mother-Child Facilities. In the transition from adolescence to adulthood, giving birth increases the exposure of child maltreatment, neglect, and adverse child development as well as the risk of maternal mental health problems [7,8,9,10]. The cumulation of further risk factors like absence of partner, poverty, own history of childhood trauma, and high level of psychological stress makes these mothers vulnerable for impaired maternal functioning in the postpartum period and may influence sensitivity towards the infant [6, 8, 10, 11]. Primary feasibility objectives were recruitment and attrition, with potential efficacy defined as the secondary feasibility objective

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