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Depressed Mothers Can Still Be Good Moms

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Depressed Mothers Can Still Be Good Moms

Medically treating post-partum depression may not be enough to improve a mother's relationship with her baby, and is only part of the equation, according to a new study done in part by the University of Alberta.

The other essential factor is giving struggling new mothers basic tools to read behavioral cues from their babies and effectively respond to their needs, said Dr. Robert Short, a co-author on the study and professor of educational psychology at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada. The pilot study of 11 mild to moderately depressed mothers and their babies showed that when the women were taught how to react to their babies' emotional cues, the infants responded with heightened levels of interest and joy, even though their mothers' depression levels did not change.

"They were able to be positive for their babies despite their own struggles," Short said.

The study, which also included research from the University of New Brunswick, appears in this month's issue of Journal of Affective Disorders.

The study used an intervention program called the Keys to Care giving (KTC) that helps parents understand and respond to infant behaviors, with the goal of increasing positive expressions in the babies. Over five weekly group sessions, the moms and babies were videotaped before and after KTC intervention. The tapes were then scored for the facial emotion expressions of the infants. In one experiment, prior to intervention, 39 per cent of infants displayed interest in their mothers' expressions; afterwards, it rose to 67 per cent. The babies' expressions of joy rose from 2.8 per cent to 13 per cent.

The

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