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Tundra lists 7 Maternal Distress clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT07296107
In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) and Prenatal Effects Independent of Genetics
This study examines how maternal stress during pregnancy affects infant brain and behavioral development, focusing on whether these effects are due to the prenatal environment or shared genes. By comparing IVF pregnancies using donor eggs/embryos (no shared genetics) with non-donor IVF pregnancies, the investigators aim to understand how stress influences the baby's development independent of genetic factors. Participants will complete questionnaires, provide blood samples, and take part in placenta and cord blood collection, fetal monitoring, and newborn brain activity assessments. Aim 1: The influence of maternal distress on perinatal neurobehavioral development. Hypotheses: Independent of IVF group status, higher maternal AL will be associated with higher 3rd trimester FHR reactivity, lower FHR variability, AND lower FHR-movement coupling Aim 2: Maternal distress affecting placenta gene methylation. Hypotheses: Independent of IVF group status, maternal AL will be associated with placenta differential DNA methylation in glucocorticoid-regulating genes (FKBP5 and HSD11B2), Aim 3: Maternal experiences associated with unique placenta transcriptomic profiles. Hypotheses: Independent of IVF group status, maternal AL and well-being each will be associated with unique placenta gene expression in pro-inflammatory genes
Gender: FEMALE
Ages: 18 Years - 50 Years
Updated: 2026-02-13
1 state
NCT06054412
An Adjunctive Neurofeedback Training Program to Enhance Wellness Among Trauma-Exposed Postpartum Mothers
The proposed study will collect novel data evaluating the feasibility of the NFB training program delivered in an outpatient mental health setting and its influence on mothers' overall sense of well-being, and further investigate whether enhanced well-being is associated with positive changes in emotion regulation capacities, trauma-related mental health symptoms, parenting behaviors and attitudes, and infant behavioral outcomes (i.e., crying, fussing) among postpartum mothers with a history of childhood trauma and clinically concerning trauma-related mental health symptoms.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 60 Years
Updated: 2025-11-12
1 state
NCT05474534
An Intervention to Enhance Well-Being in Trauma Exposed New Mothers
This pilot randomized controlled trial will evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of a mobile neurofeedback intervention for increasing maternal overall well-being, and measuring whether mothers experience any subsequent reductions in trauma symptoms and parenting stress and enhancements in regard to emotional regulation, parenting sensitivity and positive parenting behaviors, as well as infant socio-emotional development and behavioral outcomes (i.e., crying, fussing) among postpartum mothers with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. The investigators hypothesize that mothers who receive the neurofeedback intervention will demonstrate larger decreases in mental health symptoms, greater improvements in emotional regulation and observed parenting behaviors, increased feelings of parenting competency, decreased feelings of parenting stress, and reductions in the potential for child maltreatment than mothers in the control group. The investigators also hypothesize that infants of mothers who receive the neurofeedback intervention will demonstrate less crying and fussiness and higher scores on socio-emotional developmental assessments than infants of mothers in the control group at the posttest interval.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-11-12
1 state
NCT06510075
Providing an Optimized and Empowered Pregnancy for You (POPPY) Aim 3: Randomized Controlled Trial
The PᵌOPPY study is designed to support the American Heart Association's mission to improve maternal/infant health outcomes and address inequities in maternal/infant health care. The P3OPPY Project is one of five projects within the American Heart Association P3 EQUATE Network. The overarching goal of the P3 EQUATE American Heart Association Health Equity Research Network (HERN) is to promote equity in Maternal and Infant Health outcomes by identifying innovative and cost-effective strategies to enhance access to quality health information, care, and experiences during pregnancy, postnatal and postpartum/preconception periods, particularly for Black and under-served populations. Collectively, the investigators will collaborate with pregnant and postpartum individuals and their families, hospitals, and communities to discover ways to reduce racism and social problems that contribute to poor health outcomes. In this trial, 400 non-Hispanic Black participants will be randomized to see if 2 promising interventions (digital health interventions and community health workers) reduce adverse pregnancy outcomes.
Gender: FEMALE
Ages: 16 Years - 49 Years
Updated: 2025-08-17
1 state
NCT04749888
Impact of the Korea Early Childhood Home-visiting Intervention
Maternal and early childhood home visits have been proposed as an effective strategy to improve the health and development of disadvantaged children. In South Korea (hereafter, Korea), a maternal and early childhood home visit program has been implemented since 2013 in Seoul, and then was adopted in 2019 by the central government as a national policy for child health and development. The Korea Early Childhood Home-visiting Intervention (KECHI) encompasses 25-29 home visits, group activities, and community service linkage by social workers from the prenatal period until the child reaches the age of 2 years; as such, it is a complex intervention involving various domains to address a wide range of outcomes. Each home visit is implemented based on the family's needs, and individualized interventions are provided to improve parenting and the home environment in order to promote children's health and development and maternal health. This study is a randomized controlled community trial conducted in Korea to examine the impact of targeted home visits led by nurses in the prenatal and early childhood period on children's health and development and maternal health. This study is a superiority trial with two parallel groups from pregnancy until the child reaches 2 years of age. Pregnant women with two or more risk factors will be recruited to participate in the study after they provide informed consent. Participants will then be randomly assigned to the intervention or control group with a 1:1 allocation through an independent web-based random allocation system. We expect a total of 800 families (400 families in each group) to be recruited. The intervention group will receive the KECHI program and the control group will receive existing maternal and child health services (usual care), but not multiple home visits by nurses. Both groups will receive gift cards of 30,000 Korean won (about 27 USD) for each round of surveys. The intervention and control groups will be surveyed on the outcome variables of home environment, child development, breastfeeding, maternal health, child hospital visits due to injuries, and community service linkage at four home visits by trained research nurses at baseline and at 6 months, 12 months, and 24 months after birth. Telephone contact will also be made at 6 weeks and 18 months after birth for both groups. Outcome measurements will be performed by research nurses and data management will be conducted by statistical analysts. The analysis will be conducted for the intention-to-treat (ITT) and per-protocol (PP) groups, with an interim analysis of outcomes up to the 6-month follow-up. For the primary outcomes and certain secondary outcomes, subgroup analyses will be performed based on factors such as region, fertility status, number of risk factors, presence of depression, education level, etc. Furthermore, this study will utilize administrative data available for all study participants to evaluate both short and long-term impacts of the KECHI intervention on maternal and child outcomes.
Gender: FEMALE
Updated: 2025-07-16
NCT06898658
Conscious Pregnancy: Supporting Maternal Cardiometabolic Health With Mindfulness
A pilot randomized control trial (RCT) to examine the efficacy of a culturally tailored mindfulness intervention upon fasting cardiometabolic factors (including markers of glycemic control) and inflammatory gene expression in n=60 (n=30 intervention, n=30 wait-list control) low-income Spanish-speaking Latina pregnant women. The study will be conducted in partnership with MOMS, a nonprofit community organization that serves low-income pregnant and postpartum women.
Gender: FEMALE
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-04-11
1 state
NCT06663397
Laughter Yoga's Impact on Traumatic Childbirth Preparation
This study will be conducted as a single-center, parallel-group, randomized controlled intervention trial to determine the effects of birth preparation training supported by laughter yoga on the perception of traumatic birth, fear of birth, prenatal depression, and attachment in primiparous women. The research population will consist of pregnant women who attend the Pregnancy Clinic of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Cebeci Medical Faculty, Ankara University. The study will involve two groups: the first group will receive birth preparation training supported by laughter yoga, while the second group will receive standard birth preparation training. A total of 68 pregnant women, 34 in each group, are planned to participate in the study. Data will be collected using the Introductory Information Form, Traumatic Birth Perception Scale, Prenatal Self-Assessment Scale Fear of Birth Subscale, Edinburgh Depression Scale, and Prenatal Attachment Inventory. These instruments will be administered to the participants three times: before the training, immediately after the training, and one month later. The research data will be analyzed using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 24. Descriptive statistics (number, percentage, mean, standard deviation, minimum, and maximum values) will be used for data analysis. Independent samples t-test will be employed for comparisons between two independent groups, paired samples t-test will be used for repeated measures, one-way ANOVA will be used for comparisons among more than two groups, and Pearson correlation analysis will be applied for the relationship between two quantitative variables. When data do not follow a normal distribution, the Mann-Whitney U test will be used for comparisons between two independent groups, the Wilcoxon signed-rank test will be used for repeated measures, the Kruskal-Wallis test will be used for comparisons among more than two groups, and Spearman correlation analysis will be used for the relationship between two quantitative variables. The reliability of the scales used in the study will be determined using Cronbach's alpha coefficient. Statistical significance will be set at p \< 0.05.
Gender: FEMALE
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2024-10-29