ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

mHealth Intervention to Reduce Maternal Postnatal Depression and Promote Family Health

T

The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Family Relations
Quality of Life
Postnatal Depression

Treatments

Behavioral: mother-only mHealth Intervention
Behavioral: family-based mHealth Intervention
Other: Health education

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05275413
KC/KE-20-0119/ER-2

Details and patient eligibility

About

The proposed study is to test the effectiveness of a culturally-attuned, family-based mobile health (mHealth) intervention in reducing symptoms of postnatal depression and promoting health among expectant mothers in Hong Kong. Using a family perspective, the proposed mHealth intervention will engage family members, including expectant fathers and grandparents, in providing support to expectant mothers. Expectant mothers and their family members will be recruited at antenatal clinics at two public hospitals in Hong Kong and randomized to receive the family-based mHealth intervention (experimental), the mother-only mHealth intervention (experimental), or the health education (control). Maternal depression, anxiety and stress, perceived social support, health-related quality of life, and perceived family cohesion will be assessed at recruitment and four weeks after childbirth. For family members, symptoms of anxiety and stress, health-related quality of life, and perceived family cohesion will be measured.

Full description

Postnatal depression is a prevalent health issue affecting women. Although empirical evidence has proven the effectiveness of face-to-face antenatal classes in reducing perinatal distress, the availability of such support is often limited and is insufficient to benefit all parents who need it. Another challenge in pregnancy support is the difficulty to engage family members in providing support to expectant mothers. To address these limitations, the proposed project aims to develop and test the effectiveness of a family-based mobile health (mHealth) intervention, which will engage family members, including expectant fathers and grandparents to provide support to expectant mothers.

Specifically, the family-based mHealth intervention consists of a smartphone app with different versions designed for expectant mothers, fathers, and grandparents. The smartphone app will provide a user-friendly platform for users to receive psychoeducation materials related to pregnancy (e.g. antenatal care, postnatal care, and infant care) and an interactive forum for all users to ask questions related to pregnancy and family communication, which will be answered by health and social care professionals. To enhance family's engagement, we will also include other functions in the app to encourage communications among family members and enhance family cohesion. These functions include a platform for family members to send texts and share photos, and a shared schedule with alerts for dates related to pregnancy (e.g. appointments for antenatal check-ups and expected delivery date).

Using a randomized controlled design, the proposed study will evaluate the effectiveness of the family-based mHealth intervention in reducing maternal postnatal depression and promoting health in expectant mothers and their family members (expectant fathers and grandparents). The study will recruit 1,578 expectant mothers and their family members at the antenatal clinics at two selected public hospitals in Hong Kong. The participants will be randomized into three groups (i) family-based mHealth intervention; (ii) mother-only mHealth intervention; and (iii) health information control. Participants will be asked to complete a survey with question items related to their physical and mental health, perceived social support and family cohesion, at recruitment and four weeks after childbirth.

It is hypothesized that the family-based mHealth intervention is more effective in reducing symptoms of postnatal depression, promoting health of expectant mothers and their family members, and promoting family cohesion than the mother-only mHealth intervention and the control.

Enrollment

1,578 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Expectant mothers (18 years old or above) attending the antenatal clinics at two public hospitals, Kwong Wah Hospital and Tsan Yuk Hospital in Hong Kong and their family members.
  2. Possession of a smartphone and a personal email address for receiving and sending information relevant to the study.
  3. Willing to accept the study arrangements.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Not able to understand written or spoken Chinese.
  2. Expectant mothers whose EPDS score is equal to or high than the cut-off score of 10.
  3. Not willing or not able to provide informed consent.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

1,578 participants in 3 patient groups

family-based mHealth intervention
Experimental group
Description:
The expectant mothers and their family members (fathers and grandparents) in this group will receive health education and support and family support via a smartphone app.
Treatment:
Behavioral: family-based mHealth Intervention
mother-only mHealth intervention
Experimental group
Description:
The expectant mothers in this group will receive health education and support via a smartphone app.
Treatment:
Behavioral: mother-only mHealth Intervention
Health education
Active Comparator group
Description:
The expectant mothers in the control group will receive health education via a smartphone app.
Treatment:
Other: Health education

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

2

Loading...

Central trial contact

Camilla Kin Ming LO, Phd

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems