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Am J Occup Ther ; 77(3)2023 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37294680

ABSTRACT

IMPORTANCE: Mothers of children with disabilities experience health disparity. Interventions targeting maternal mental health need to be developed. OBJECTIVE: To determine the feasibility and preliminary effectiveness of the Healthy Mothers Healthy Families-Health Promoting Activities Coaching (HMHF-HPAC) intervention for mothers to improve participation in healthy activities and mental health and to evaluate outcome measures. DESIGN: Nonrandomized controlled pilot feasibility study with one group who received HMHF-HPAC and a control group. SETTING: Pediatric occupational therapy service; on site or telehealth. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-three mothers completed prequestionnaires; of those, 11 mothers participated in the intervention, and 5 did not (7 withdrew). INTERVENTION: Eleven pediatric occupational therapists were trained to deliver six 10-min sessions of HMHF-HPAC to mothers, integrated into their child's therapy session or separately via telehealth. OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Mixed-design analysis of variance explored changes in scores on the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale-21 Items and the Health Promoting Activities Scale. RESULTS: The intervention group reported, on average, significant reductions in depressive symptoms and stress symptoms and significant increases in participation in health-promoting activity. No significant main effect of time was found for these variables in the control group. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The HMHF-HPAC program is a viable occupational therapy coaching intervention that can be embedded in existing services for families of children with disabilities. Future trials that evaluate the effectiveness of the HMHF-HPAC intervention for mothers of children with disabilities are warranted. What This Article Adds: This article provides support for the feasibility of appropriate and sensitive outcome measures and program content and delivery to implement the novel HMHF-HPAC intervention in further research. Mothers of children with disabilities benefited from integrated HMHF-HPAC delivered by pediatric occupational therapists within the family's existing services.


Subject(s)
Disabled Children , Mentoring , Female , Humans , Child , Feasibility Studies , Mothers/psychology , Health Promotion
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