(Boston) - June 14, 2017- Boston Medical Center (BMC), in partnership with Action for Boston Community Development’s (ABCD) Head Start program, has helped mothers experience a 40 percent reduction in the emergence of clinically significant depressive symptom episodes. Among the study’s subpopulation whose initial depression screening indicated low depressive symptom levels, they experienced a 61 percent reduction. The five-year study screened more than 2,200 mothers for their depression risk within Head Start locations in the Boston area and was the first to use lay health workers to deliver a depression prevention intervention within a community-based agency. The study, published in JAMA Psychiatry, could also help shape public health policy for improving mental health screening and preventing depression in mothers with young children.
Maternal depression affects approximately 12 million women in the United States each year. It also disproportionately impacts low-income and minority women; work by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services found that depression impacts almost half of all Head Start mothers. Depression not only impacts mothers but their children and families as well. Children of depressed mothers are two to three times more likely to develop a mood disorder, and they are at increased risk for impaired cognitive, social and academic functioning, and poor physical health, according to the Encyclopedia of Early Childhood Development. Preventing depression in mothers, therefore, has implications for both generations.
In 2009, the Institute of Medicine called for initiatives to take place in community-based venues capable of providing services for both adults and children. Head Start, a national, federally-funded early learning program that addresses the needs and provides services for approximately one million low-income families each year, is one such venue.
A lay health worker, according to the World Health Organization, is someone who performs functions related to health care delivery and is trained in the context of an intervention but has not received a formal professional or paraprofessional certificate. BMC trained and certified 15 lay health workers to deliver a brief intervention called Problem Solving Education (PSE) in the context of a family’s Head Start services.
This randomized-control trial assessed the impact of six sessions of PSE as a brief intervention, which included problem-solving, depressive symptom monitoring and referral to further treatment when necessary. These sessions were completed at home visits or in Head Start centers.
Mothers who went through PSE sessions experienced a 40 percent reduction in the emergence of clinically significant depressive symptom episodes. Among the subpopulation whose initial screening indicated low depressive symptom levels, after they went through PSE sessions, they experienced a 61 percent reduction.
“Our novel approach to depression as a preventable illness, and to harnessing the ability of Head Start to reach vulnerable families in a community setting, has allowed us to truly make an impact on preventing maternal depression or on stopping low-level symptoms from getting worse,” said Michael Silverstein, MD, BMC’s associate chief medical officer for research and population health and the study’s first author.
Parents are typically deeply involved in the Head Start program, as it offers a high level of interpersonal attention; its typical services are regular family needs assessments, home visits, parenting groups, referrals to other services, and assistance with accessing community resources for food, job training, and housing.
“ABCD Head Start is a gold standard early education and care program that supports our children’s education and overall well-being. It encourages positive growth, especially to disadvantaged and poverty-stricken families by providing nutrition, health screenings, and social services,” said John Drew, President/CEO of Action for Boston Community Development (ABCD). “This study with BMC addresses a huge need for our families. In our centers here in Boston, and in Head Start programs nationally, maternal depression is an overwhelming problem. It keeps our children and families from realizing their full potential,” Drew added.
“Over the years we have done a lot of important work with Dr. Silverstein involving maternal mental health, and the development of a regional Head Start research network,” said Yvette Rodriguez, ABCD Vice President of Head Start & Children Services. “Together, we have collaborated to be a part of a randomized trial for a maternal depression prevention program involving Problem Solving Education. During this study, we realized that more Head Start mothers than originally expected met criteria for major depressive episode, and we developed an engagement intervention using the principles of the Engagement Interview. ABCD Head Start and BMC have worked together at every step in the process of this study, and developed what has become a fruitful and rewarding academic-community partnership.”
While PSE in this study was effective in preventing the onset of more severe depressive symptoms, Silverstein cautions that PSE may not be intense enough to break through clinically significant symptoms as a way to treat depression.
“We’re working on disseminating our findings within Head Start to build capacity for problem-solving education and addressing maternal depression, and we are hopeful that additional grants will allow us to continue implementing these interventions both in Massachusetts and nationally,” said Silverstein, who is also an associate professor of pediatrics at Boston University School of Medicine.
The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, project number: 3R01MH091871-05S1.
# # #
About ABCD Head Start
Long proven and innovative, Head Start is a national program that provides the highest quality early education and comprehensive services to children from low-income families. Head Start and Early Head Start encompass education, nutrition, and physical and mental health, and feature intensive parent engagement and support. Action for Boston Community Development (ABCD) Head Start serves 2,300 children and more than 20 locations in Boston, Malden and Everett.
ABCD is a nonprofit human services organization that provides low-income residents in the Greater Boston region with the tools and resources needed to transition from poverty to stability and from stability to success. Operating through neighborhood community service centers throughout Greater Boston, ABCD can rapidly respond to changing community needs. Each year, more than 100,000 adults, elders, children, and families participate in these customized and innovative local projects, as well as in some of the organization’s long-standing support programs – housing and homeless prevention services, fuel assistance, adult basic education and job training, early education and care, and more. Visit BostonABCD.org to learn more.