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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06004232
NA

Prenatal Yoga to Prevent Postpartum Depression

Sponsor: Henry Ford Health System

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Although psychological interventions exist for the prevention of PPD, a yoga-based intervention to prevent PPD among at-risk women utilizes a similar theoretical foundation (i.e., mindfulness), may be more acceptable to women of minority status, and may confer additional physical activity benefits. The purpose of this pilot study is to determine the effectiveness of using a virtually delivered prenatal yoga intervention for the prevention of PPD among at-risk women in a diverse health care system and explore preliminary factors which influence implementation of the intervention. This study has 2 phases: Phase 1 will evaluate facilitators and barriers to intervention implementation among patient, clinician, and health system stakeholders, followed by an open trial, and Phase 2 will include conducting an 8-session pilot randomized controlled trial to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the proposed prenatal yoga intervention among women with a history of depression, as well as the onset and course of PPD and mediating factors. The specific aims are to: 1) Optimize delivery of a yoga intervention within a healthcare system to prevent PPD through examining facilitators and barriers of implementation, 2) Examine feasibility, acceptability and satisfaction of the intervention within a health care system, and 3) Evaluate preliminary effectiveness of the intervention on PPD and proposed mechanisms. For Phase 1, separate focus groups with patient stakeholders and clinician and administrative stakeholders will inform intervention implementation, and an open trial to refine and optimize the intervention. For Phase 2, women with a history of depression who are 8-28 weeks pregnant will be randomized to the intervention group (n=24) or treatment-as-usual (n=24) and will complete survey measures at baseline, post-intervention, and 1 and 3 months postpartum. It is hypothesized that the intervention will be feasible and acceptable, engage women of racial/ethnic minority status, and contribute to lower rates of PPD onset. Embodiment and mindfulness are the proposed mediators. Knowledge gained from this study can support prevention efforts for PPD and improve the adverse public health impact of this disorder.

Official title: Prenatal Yoga to Prevent Postpartum Depression (PRY-D)

Key Details

Gender

FEMALE

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

62

Start Date

2025-02-26

Completion Date

2026-03

Last Updated

2025-11-13

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Prenatal Yoga to Prevent Postpartum Depression (PRY-D) intervention

The PRY-D curriculum is a mindfulness-based prenatal yoga intervention which utilizes techniques to build both embodiment and mindfulness, and has previously been shown to reduce depression in a small sample of pregnant women with clinical depression.

BEHAVIORAL

Treatment as Usual (TAU)

TAU involves routine prenatal care, during which time all patients are given information on the importance of physical activity during pregnancy.

Locations (1)

Henry Ford Health

Detroit, Michigan, United States