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Different studies have demonstrated that the absence of companionship during labor and childbirth may be responsible for a negative birth experience, an increased risk of postnatal depression and/or post traumatic stress disorders. These situation may also have a negative impact on mother-child interaction, on marital and family relationship and on the rate of maternal suicide in postpartum. However, these previous results cannot be extrapolated in the current context where the absence of the companionship is imposed by the confinement framework. The objective of the CONFINE study is to assess, for the first time, the birth experience of women in the context of limited social support in the immediate post-partum period due to confinement, as well as the associated over-risk of mental disorders, compared to a post-partum without social restriction.
Full description
The primary objective is to compare, in immediate post-partum, the maternal sense of control during childbirth between a group of women who gave birth during confinement ("confinement" group) versus a group of women who gave birth after confinement but in the context of epidemic ("epidemic" group) versus a group of control women ("control" group; excluding confinement and context of epidemic).
The secondary objectives are:
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Specific inclusion criteria according to the group For "confinement"group : Delivery during covid-19 confinement period
For "epidemic" group: Delivery after confinement period and before the withdrawal of sanitary measures implemented (mask, social distancing, limited visits during post-partum immediate)
For "control" group: Start of pregnancy after confinement and delivery after the withdrawal of all sanitary measures (mask, social distancing, limited visits during post-partum immediate)
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927 participants in 3 patient groups
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Charline BERTHOLDT
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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