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Published in: Journal of Behavioral Medicine 5/2018

Open Access 01-10-2018

Evaluation of expressive writing for postpartum health: a randomised controlled trial

Authors: Susan Ayers, Rosalind Crawley, Susan Button, Alexandra Thornton, Andy P. Field, Chris Flood, Suzanne Lee, Andrew Eagle, Robert Bradley, Donna Moore, Gill Gyte, Helen Smith

Published in: Journal of Behavioral Medicine | Issue 5/2018

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Abstract

Pregnancy, birth and adjusting to a new baby is a potentially stressful time that can negatively affect the health of women. There is some evidence that expressive writing can have positive effects on psychological and physical health, particularly during stressful periods. The current study aimed to evaluate whether expressive writing would improve women’s postpartum health. A randomized controlled trial was conducted with three conditions: expressive writing (n = 188), a control writing task (n = 213), or normal care (n = 163). Measures of psychological health, physical health and quality of life were measured at baseline (6–12 weeks postpartum), 1 and 6 months later. Ratings of stress were taken before and after the expressive writing task. Intent-to-treat analyses showed no significant differences between women in the expressive writing, control writing and normal care groups on measures of physical health, anxiety, depression, mood or quality of life at 1 and 6 months. Uptake and adherence to the writing tasks was low. However, women in the expressive writing group rated their stress as significantly reduced after completing the task. Cost analysis suggest women who did expressive writing had the lowest costs in terms of healthcare service use and lowest cost per unit of improvement in quality of life. Results suggest expressive writing is not effective as a universal intervention for all women 6–12 weeks postpartum. Future research should examine expressive writing as a targeted intervention for women in high-risk groups, such as those with mild or moderate depression, and further examine cost-effectiveness.
Clinical trial registration number ISRCTN58399513 www.​isrctn.​com
Appendix
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Footnotes
1
These outliers were a participant whose baby was in the neonatal intensive care unit for 104 days (expressive writing group) and a woman admitted to hospital after birth (normal care group).
 
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Metadata
Title
Evaluation of expressive writing for postpartum health: a randomised controlled trial
Authors
Susan Ayers
Rosalind Crawley
Susan Button
Alexandra Thornton
Andy P. Field
Chris Flood
Suzanne Lee
Andrew Eagle
Robert Bradley
Donna Moore
Gill Gyte
Helen Smith
Publication date
01-10-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Behavioral Medicine / Issue 5/2018
Print ISSN: 0160-7715
Electronic ISSN: 1573-3521
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10865-018-9970-3

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