Supporting Depressed Mothers of Young Children with Intellectual Disability: Feasibility of an Integrated Parenting Intervention in a Low-Income Setting

Author:

Chaudhry Nasim1,Sattar Rabia1,Kiran Tayyeba1,Wan Ming Wai2,Husain Mina3,Hidayatullah Sobia1,Ali Bushra1,Shafique Nadia4,Suhag Zamir5ORCID,Saeed Qamar6,Maqbool Shazia7,Husain Nusrat28

Affiliation:

1. Pakistan Institute of Living and Learning, Karachi 75600, Pakistan

2. Division of Psychology and Mental Health, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, UK

3. Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S IR8, Canada

4. Department of Psychology, Foundation University Islamabad, Rawalpindi 44000, Pakistan

5. TVI-Trust for Vaccines and Immunization, Head Office, Suite No 301, Al-Sehat Centre, Rafiqui Shaheed Road, Karachi 74000, Pakistan

6. School of Public Health, Dow University of Health Sciences DUHS, Karachi 74200, Pakistan

7. Department of Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrics, The Children’s Hospital, (UC HS-CH), University of Child Health Sciences, Lahore 54600, Pakistan

8. Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust, Prescot L34 1PJ, UK

Abstract

As a lifelong condition, intellectual disability (ID) remains a public health priority. Parents caring for children with ID experience serious challenges to their wellbeing, including depression, anxiety, stress and health-related quality of life. Integrated parenting interventions, which have been well evidenced for depressed mothers, may also effectively support depressed parents with a child with ID in low-resource settings such as Pakistan, and in turn optimise child outcomes. We conducted a mixed-method rater-blind feasibility randomised controlled trial, which assessed the feasibility and acceptability of the Learning Through Play in My Own Way Plus (LTP-IMOW Plus) intervention. Mothers who screened positive for depression (n = 26) with a young child (age 3–6 years) with ID were recruited from two low-resource community settings. Participants in the intervention arm (n = 13) received 12 group sessions of LTP-IMOW Plus and others (n = 13) received routine care. The intervention was feasible and acceptable with 100% retention and 100% session attendance. The intervention improved depression, anxiety, parenting stress and child socialisation score outcomes relative to the routine care arm. The framework utilised to analyse the qualitative interviews with seven participants at pre-intervention identified a range of struggles experienced by the mothers, and at post-intervention, found improved knowledge of child development and practices, improved mother–child relationships, recommendations for the intervention and perceived practical barriers and facilitators. The findings highlight the prospects for a clinical and cost-effective trial of an integrated parenting intervention to manage long-term parental mental health needs and improve child outcomes.

Funder

Pakistan Institute of Living and Learning

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference61 articles.

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