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Original Article

Effects of an early intervention on perceived stress and diurnal cortisol in pregnant women with elevated stress, anxiety, and depressive symptomatology

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Pages 162-170 | Received 04 Jun 2012, Accepted 07 Sep 2012, Published online: 19 Oct 2012
 

Abstract

The goal of the present investigation was to examine effects of a cognitive-behavioral group intervention for pregnant women with subclinically elevated stress, anxiety and/or depression on perceived stress and salivary cortisol levels. Expectant mothers were recruited in gynaecologist practices. They participated in a screening, a standardized diagnostic interview (Munich-Composite Diagnostic Interview, M-CIDI), and were randomly assigned to an intervention (N = 21) and treatment as usual control group (N = 40). The intervention consisted of a manualized cognitive-behavioral group program for expectant mothers with subclinically elevated stress, depression, and/or anxiety symptoms. Stress questionnaire (prenatal distress (PDQ), perceived stress (PSS)) as well as diurnal salivary cortisol assessment took place at T1 (antenatal, preintervention), at T2 (antenatal, post-intervention) and T3 (3-month postpartum). Subjects that participated in the intervention exhibited a significant post-treatment change in morning cortisol (cortisol awakening response, CAR) in contrast to control subjects, F(8,51) = 2.300, p = 0.047. Intervention participants showed a smaller CAR subsequent to the intervention, displaying a lessened stress reaction. This effect was not observed in the control group. In contrast, we failed in discovering a significant difference between the research groups regarding the cortisol area under curve parameter (AUC) and the applied subjective stress questionnaires. Evaluation results were thus heterogeneous. Nevertheless, intervention effects on the CAR are promising. Our results suggest that a cognitive-behavioral intervention might lead to an improvement in the biological stress response of pregnant women with subclinically elevated stress, anxiety, or depressive symptoms.

Declaration of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Current knowledge on the subject

  • The prevalence of stress, anxiety, and depression in pregnancy is comparable to nonpregnant samples.

  • Perinatal stress, anxiety, and/or depression have long-lasting effects on mother and child.

  • Specific antenatal interventions are rare and show heterogenic results.

What this study adds

  • There has not been a randomized controlled trial of a cognitive-behavioral early intervention for pregnant women with stress, anxiety, and/or depression before.

  • Intervention effects were assessed regarding psychometric variables as well as salivary cortisol as biomarker of stress.

  • Intervention effects were shown in a reduced cortisol awakening response in intervention participants.

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