Tackling post-natal depression in poorer countriesResearchers from Liverpool working in rural Rawalpindi in Pakistan have found a simple and effective way to cut depression in mothers in poorer countries.
In the trial, 463 mothers from 20 villages were given the programme, while 440 from another 20 villages acted as a control. The team found that mothers in the control group were more than four times likely to be depressed than those given the programme. They also found that babies of mothers on the programme were less likely to have had diarrhoea, and were more likely to have had all their immunisations. They also found that mothers and fathers in the group on the programme played with their babies more often, and were also more likely to use contraceptives.
14th Sep 2008 |
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