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Parent-infant psychotherapy for improving parental and infant mental health

机译:亲子心理疗法可改善父母和婴儿的心理健康

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摘要

BackgroundParent-infant psychotherapy (PIP) is a dyadic intervention that works with parent and infant together, with the aim of improving the parent-infant relationship and promoting infant attachment and optimal infant development. PIP aims to achieve this by targeting the mother’s view of her infant, which may be affected by her own experiences, and linking them to her current relationship to her child, in order to improve the parent-infant relationship directly.Objectives1. To assess the effectiveness of PIP in improving parental and infant mental health and the parent-infant relationship.2. To identify the programme components that appear to be associated with more effective outcomes and factors that modify intervention effectiveness (e.g. programme duration, programme focus).Search methodsWe searched the following electronic databases on 13 January 2014: Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL, 2014, Issue 1), Ovid MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, BIOSIS Citation Index, Science Citation Index, ERIC, and Sociological Abstracts. We also searched the metaRegister of Controlled Trials, checked reference lists, and contacted study authors and other experts.Selection criteriaTwo review authors assessed study eligibility independently. We included randomised controlled trials (RCT) and quasi-randomised controlled trials (quasi-RCT) that compared a PIP programme directed at parents with infants aged 24 months or less at study entry, with a control condition (i.e. waiting-list, no treatment or treatment-as-usual), and used at least one standardised measure of parental or infant functioning. We also included studies that only used a second treatment group.Data collection and analysisWe adhered to the standard methodological procedures of The Cochrane Collaboration. We standardised the treatment effect for each outcome in each study by dividing the mean difference (MD) in post-intervention scores between the intervention and control groups by the pooled standard deviation. We presented standardised mean differences (SMDs) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for continuous data, and risk ratios (RR) for dichotomous data. We undertook meta-analysis using a random-effects model.Main resultsWe included eight studies comprising 846 randomised participants, of which four studies involved comparisons of PIP with control groups only. Four studies involved comparisons with another treatment group (i.e. another PIP, video-interaction guidance, psychoeducation, counselling or cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)), two of these studies included a control group in addition to an alternative treatment group. Samples included women with postpartum depression, anxious or insecure attachment, maltreated, and prison populations. We assessed potential bias (random sequence generation, allocation concealment, incomplete outcome data, selective reporting, blinding of participants and personnel, blinding of outcome assessment, and other bias). Four studies were at low risk of bias in four or more domains. Four studies were at high risk of bias for allocation concealment, and no study blinded participants or personnel to the intervention. Five studies did not provide adequate information for assessment of risk of bias in at least one domain (rated as unclear).Six studies contributed data to the PIP versus control comparisons producing 19 meta-analyses of outcomes measured at post-intervention or follow-up, or both, for the primary outcomes of parental depression (both dichotomous and continuous data); measures of parent-child interaction (i.e. maternal sensitivity, child involvement and parent engagement; infant attachment category (secure, avoidant, disorganised, resistant); attachment change (insecure to secure, stable secure, secure to insecure, stable insecure); infant behaviour and secondary outcomes (e.g. infant cognitive development). The results favoured neither PIP nor control for incidence of parental depression (RR 0.74, 95% CI 0.52 to 1.04, 3 studies, 278 participants, low quality evidence) or parent-reported levels of depression (SMD -0.22, 95% CI -0.46 to 0.02, 4 studies, 356 participants, low quality evidence). There were improvements favouring PIP in the proportion of infants securely attached at post-intervention (RR 8.93, 95% CI 1.25 to 63.70, 2 studies, 168 participants, very low quality evidence); a reduction in the number of infants with an avoidant attachment style at post-intervention (RR 0.48, 95% CI 0.24 to 0.95, 2 studies, 168 participants, low quality evidence); fewer infants with disorganised attachment at post-intervention (RR 0.32, 95% CI 0.17 to 0.58, 2 studies, 168 participants, low quality evidence); and an increase in the proportion of infants moving from insecure to secure attachment at post-intervention (RR 11.45, 95% CI 3.11 to 42.08, 2 studies, 168 participants, low quality evidence). There were no differences between PIP and control in any of the meta-analyses for the remaining primary outcomes (i.e. adverse effects), or secondary outcomes.Four studies contributed data at post-intervention or follow-up to the PIP versus alternative treatment analyses producing 15 meta-analyses measuring parent mental health (depression); parent-infant interaction (maternal sensitivity); infant attachment category (secure, avoidant, resistant, disorganised) and attachment change (insecure to secure, stable secure, secure to insecure, stable insecure); infant behaviour and infant cognitive development. None of the remaining meta-analyses of PIP versus alternative treatment for primary outcomes (i.e. adverse effects), or secondary outcomes showed differences in outcome or any adverse changes.We used the Grades of Recommendation, Assessment, Development and Evaluation Working Group (GRADE) approach to rate the overall quality of the evidence. For all comparisons, we rated the evidence as low or very low quality for parental depression and secure or disorganised infant attachment. Where we downgraded the evidence, it was because there was risk of bias in the study design or execution of the trial. The included studies also involved relatively few participants and wide CI values (imprecision), and, in some cases, we detected clinical and statistical heterogeneity (inconsistency). Lower quality evidence resulted in lower confidence in the estimate of effect for those outcomes.Authors' conclusionsAlthough the findings of the current review suggest that PIP is a promising model in terms of improving infant attachment security in high-risk families, there were no significant differences compared with no treatment or treatment-as-usual for other parent-based or relationship-based outcomes, and no evidence that PIP is more effective than other methods of working with parents and infants. Further rigorous research is needed to establish the impact of PIP on potentially important mediating factors such as parental mental health, reflective functioning, and parent-infant interaction.
机译:背景技术父母婴儿心理治疗(PIP)是一种与父母和婴儿一起工作的二元干预,旨在改善父母与婴儿的关系并促进婴儿的依恋和最佳的婴儿发育。 PIP旨在通过针对母亲对婴儿的看法(可能会受到她自己的经历的影响)并将其与当前与孩子的关系联系起来,以直接改善父母与婴儿的关系来实现这一目标。评估PIP在改善父母和婴儿心理健康以及父母与婴儿之间的关系方面的有效性; 2。为了确定似乎与更有效的结果和影响干预效果的因素相关的计划组成部分(例如,计划持续时间,计划重点)。搜索方法我们于2014年1月13日搜索了以下电子数据库:Cochrane对照试验中央注册系统(CENTRAL, 2014年第1期),Ovid MEDLINE,EMBASE,CINAHL,PsycINFO,BIOSIS引文索引,科学引文索引,ERIC和社​​会学摘要。我们还搜索了对照试验的metaRegister,检查了参考文献清单,并联系了研究作者和其他专家。选择标准两名评价作者独立评估了研究资格。我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCT)和半随机对照试验(准RCT),该试验比较了针对研究入组时年龄在24个月以下的婴儿的父母的PIP计划与对照条件(即等待名单,未接受治疗)或通常的治疗),并至少使用了一项针对父母或婴儿功能的标准化指标。我们还包括仅使用第二个治疗组的研究。数据收集和分析我们遵守Cochrane协作组织的标准方法程序。通过将干预组与对照组之间干预后评分的平均差(MD)除以合并的标准差,我们标准化了每项研究中每种结局的治疗效果。对于连续数据,我们提出了标准化的平均差异(SMD)和95%置信区间(CI),对于二分数据,我们提出了风险比(RR)。我们使用随机效应模型进行了荟萃分析。主要结果我们纳入了846名随机参与者的八项研究,其中四项研究仅涉及PIP与对照组的比较。四项研究涉及与另一个治疗组(即另一个PIP,视频互动指导,心理教育,咨询或认知行为疗法(CBT))的比较,其中两个研究除替代治疗组外还包括对照组。样本包括产后抑郁,焦虑或不安全依恋,受虐待和监狱人口的妇女。我们评估了潜在的偏见(随机序列生成,分配隐藏,不完整的结果数据,选择性报告,参与者和人员的盲目性,结果评估的盲目性以及其他偏见)。四项研究在四个或更多领域的偏见风险低。有四项研究存在隐藏分配偏见的高风险,并且没有研究使参与者或人员不愿干预。五项研究没有提供足够的信息来评估至少一个领域的偏倚风险(尚不清楚)。六项研究为PIP与对照比较提供了数据,从而在干预后或随访时进行了19项荟萃分析,或两者兼而有之,用于父母抑郁症的主要结局(二分和连续数据);亲子互动的量度(即母亲的敏感性,儿童的参与和父母的参与;婴儿依恋的类别(安全,避免,无组织,有抵抗力);依恋变化(对安全不安全,稳定安全,对安全不安全,稳定不安全);婴儿行为和次要结局(例如婴儿认知发展),结果既不赞成PIP,也不赞成控制父母的抑郁症发生率(RR 0.74、95%CI 0.52至1.04、3个研究,278名参与者,低质量证据)或父母报告的抑郁症水平(SMD -0.22,95%CI -0.46至0.02,4个研究,356名参与者,低质量证据)。干预后牢固附着婴儿的比例,PIP有改善(RR 8.93,95%CI 1.25至63.70)。 ,2个研究,168名参与者,证据质量非常低);干预后回避依恋型婴儿的数量减少(RR 0.48,95%CI 0.24至0.95,2个研究,168名参与者,质量低劣的证据ence);干预后依恋杂乱无章的婴儿较少(RR 0.32,95%CI 0.17至0.58,2个研究,168名参与者,低质量证据);干预后婴儿从不安全状态转为安全依恋状态的比例有所增加(RR 11.45,95%CI 3.11至42.08,2个研究,168名参与者,低质量的证据)。在其余主要结果(即不良反应)或次要结果的荟萃分析中,PIP和对照之间没有差异。四项研究在PIP干预后或随访时与替代治疗分析产生的数据进行了比较15项评估父母心理健康(抑郁)的荟萃分析;亲子互动(母性敏感性);婴儿依恋类别(安全,避免,抵抗,混乱)和依恋变化(对安全不安全,稳定安全,对不安全安全,不安全稳定);婴儿行为和婴儿认知发展。对于主要结果(即不良反应)或次要结果,PIP与替代治疗的其余荟萃分析均未显示出结果差异或任何不利变化。我们使用了推荐,评估,发展和评估工作组(GRADE)的等级评价证据整体质量的方法。对于所有比较,我们认为父母抑郁和婴儿依恋稳固或杂乱无章的证据质量为低或非常低。我们将证据降级的原因是,研究设计或试验的执行存在偏差的风险。纳入的研究还涉及相对较少的参与者和较宽的CI值(不精确),并且在某些情况下,我们检测到临床和统计上的异质性(不一致)。质量较低的证据导致对这些结局的效果评估的信心较低。作者的结论尽管当前综述的结果表明,就提高高危家庭的婴儿依恋安全性而言,PIP是一种有前途的模型,但没有显着差异与没有其他基于父母或基于亲属关系的结果的治疗或通常的治疗相比,没有证据表明PIP比其他与父母和婴儿一起工作的方法更有效。需要进行更严格的研究来确定PIP对潜在重要调解因素的影响,例如父母的心理健康,反射功能以及父母与婴儿的互动。

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