Melodies for Mums (M4M) is an intervention developed and tested as part of a collaboration between the Royal College of Music, Imperial College London and University College London from 2015-2017. The programme involved weekly singing classes for mothers and babies delivered in groups of 8-12 participants in Children's Centres for 10 weeks. M4M was tested in a three-arm RCT involving 134 mothers with PND (with an Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) score above 10), compared with a comparison group (10 weeks of creative play classes) or care as usual (wait-list control). The study found that mothers with moderate-severe symptoms of PND who participated in the programme with their baby had a significantly faster improvement in symptoms than mothers in usual care. Specifically, the mothers in the singing group had an average EPDS score of 15.7 at baseline (moderate depression), which dropped to 10.3 by week 6 and 9.4 by week 10. This improvement equated to an average 35% decrease in depressive symptoms across the first 6 weeks, by which point 65% of the singing group no longer had an EPDS above 13. While funding has been secured to upscale this intervention as part of the SHAPER-PND programme, funded by the Wellcome Trust, the recent lockdown has not only halted the programme in its face-to-face format, but also prompted the interest in developing an online version that can be used (1) if the requirement for social distancing, even when the lockdown is relaxed, makes impossible the delivery of the programme; and (2) to broaden the reach to a nationwide delivery and extending to a wider population that may not have been able to attend in-person sessions due to geographical constraints or severity of symptoms. M4M online is a 6-week intervention for mothers with PND. The original M4M programme would be delivered face-to-face in groups of 8-12 mothers in weekly sessions lasting one hour. However, due to the current situation with COVID-19, we will therefore modify the original face-to-face intervention for this online study, as follows: * Groups of around 15-17 women to ensure that all participants can be visible on one screen during online delivery to create a stronger community and connection * Offer 6 weeks of intervention, also building on the evidence from the face-to-face intervention that by 6 weeks there is already a significant improvement in depressive symptoms compared with control interventions * Introduce a two-week lead-in period before the beginning of the six-session course, where mothers will be able to use WhatsApp and at least one (monitored) Zoom session to get to know each other.
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To Assess the Effectiveness of Online Group Singing Interventions on Symptoms of Postnatal Depression Using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS)
Timeframe: The primary outcome measure is changes in EPDS total score between baseline and Week 6 (end of treatment).