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Since its emergence in December 2019, COVID-19 has reshaped the world. Mental health problems are predicted to rise dramatically as a secondary effect of the disease and measures put in place to contain it. Our emerging evidence shows parents of young children have not been spared from these effects and are experiencing 4-fold increases depression and anxiety. Young children are highly vulnerable to parent mental illness due to their reliance on caregivers to meet basic needs. Interventions are needed that consider the unique mental health and parenting challenges families are encountering during the pandemic. Our team of mental health and program development experts will address these needs through an online psychoeducation and social-connection platform, BEAM: Building Emotional Awareness and Mental Health. BEAM brings together best practices in online telehealth programs in a highly personalized and interactive format to address multiple family needs. With clinical research investigators across provinces, the BEAM pilot project will provide services to 60 mothers (30 per group) of 6-36 month old children in Manitoba and Alberta.
Full description
Families are facing unprecedented challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic. Emerging evidence from our recent family research shows elevated rates of maternal depression in parents of 0-5-year-old children, compared to pre-pandemic cohorts with similar demographic profiles. In our combined data of over 3000 families of 0 to 5-year-old children, 37-48% of mothers were classified as depressed, based on child age group, with 65% of depressed mothers also experiencing anxiety. In early childhood, exposure to maternal mental illness predicts risk for children's own mental health problems, developmental delays, asthma, and injury risk. For mothers themselves, depression contributes to health problems and low quality of life. Notably, these harms are most pronounced when depression persists, highlighting the importance of intervening early to prevent intergenerational health impairments.
Although evidence-based treatments exist to address maternal mental illness, there are high barriers to accessing care due to COVID-19. These include physical distancing, high costs of individual therapy, closure of existing services, and overwhelming childcare demands. Only 5% of mothers in our sample with depression report accessing services in the past month. The parenting stress associated with maternal depression is established to lead to low-quality interactions and harsh discipline, which is particularly concerning with children are spending nearly all their time at home.
Addressing these intergenerational health concerns will require innovative program design methods to simultaneously treat maternal mental illness and address parenting risks. We have developed the Building Emotional Awareness & Mental Health (BEAM) program to immediately address these needs. Investing in maternal mental health now, before problems are entrenched, is expected to yield high health and economic benefits by preventing the long-term consequences of maternal depression from becoming embedded in children's biological and behavioural development. Our team of mental health, parenting, and program development experts will address these needs through an online psycho-education and social-connection platform.
There are 3 objectives for this study:
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Leslie E. Roos, PhD; Lianne Tomfohr-Madsen, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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