Nurses, midwives can help treat depression during pregnancy and new motherhood: study
TORONTO — Nurses, midwives and doulas can treat depression and anxiety symptoms experienced during pregnancy and after delivery, a new study says.
The clinical trial, published Monday in the journal Nature Medicine, suggests training non-mental-health specialists in short-term behavioural therapy can make treatment available for people who don’t have a psychologist or psychiatrist.
Depression and anxiety symptoms affect one in five women who are pregnant or postpartum in Canada and the U.S., said lead author Dr. Daisy Singla, a senior scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto.
The researchers randomly assigned 1,230 participants to eight sessions of behavioural activation therapy delivered by either a mental health specialist or a non-mental-health specialist who had received training on the treatment.


