key: cord-0727295-22u4vqxz authors: Fellmeth, G; Kishore, M T; Verma, A; Desai, G; Bharti, O; Kanwar, P; Singh, S; Thippeswamy, H; Chandra, P S; Kurinczuk, J J; Nair, M; Alderdice, F title: Perinatal mental health in India: protocol for a validation and cohort study date: 2021-10-08 journal: J Public Health (Oxf) DOI: 10.1093/pubmed/fdab162 sha: e3c21b7dc4b8b24f28e35e828799510d39d77238 doc_id: 727295 cord_uid: 22u4vqxz BACKGROUND: Common mental disorders (CMD) are among the largest contributors to global maternal morbidity and mortality. Although research on perinatal mental health in India has grown in recent years, important evidence gaps remain, especially regarding CMD. Our study aims to improve understanding of CMD among perinatal and non-perinatal women of reproductive age across two settings in India: Bangalore (Karnataka) and Tanda (Himachal Pradesh). METHODS: The study is embedded within the Maternal and Perinatal Health Research Collaboration India (MaatHRI). This mixed-methods observational study comprises three consecutive phases: (i) focus group discussions and individual interviews to explore women’s knowledge and seek feedback on CMD screening tools; (ii) validation of CMD screening tools; and (iii) prospective cohort study to identify CMD incidence, prevalence and risk factors among perinatal and non-perinatal women. Results of the three phases will be analyzed using inductive thematic analysis, psychometric analysis and multivariable regression analysis, respectively. CONCLUSION: Improving understanding, detection and management of CMD among women is key to improving women’s health and promoting gender equality. This study will provide evidence of CMD screening tools for perinatal and non-perinatal women in two diverse Indian settings, produce data on CMD prevalence, incidence and risk factors and enhance understanding of the specific contribution of the perinatal state to CMD. Globally, common mental disorders (CMD) including depressive and anxiety disorders are one of the largest contributors to maternal morbidity and mortality. 1 A disproportionate burden of perinatal CMD is borne by low-and middle-income countries (LMIC). 2 In India, persisting stigma towards mental disorders, socio-economic deprivation, intimate partner violence, traditional confinement practices after childbirth and women's low status in society act as risk factors for the development of mental disorders for many women. 3 The prevalence of perinatal depression in India has been estimated at 22%, though estimates are subject to significant heterogeneity based on the tools used, sample size, study population and location. 4, 5 Fewer studies have focused on anxiety. One recent study estimated a prevalence of generalized anxiety disorder of 23% among perinatal women in a tertiary care hospital in South India. 6 Additionally, an estimated 7.6% of women in India experience suicidal ideation in pregnancyan important contributor to maternal mortality across low-, middle-and high-income settings alike. 7 Although research on perinatal mental health in India has grown in recent years, important evidence gaps remain. 8 Firstly, few studies have assessed the psychometric validity of screening tools for perinatal CMD in India. 4, 9 Screening tools, which have been translated from other languages and cultural settings but have not been validated locally, may be unreliable when used in Indian contexts. 10 For instance, optimal cutoffs may vary across settings and especially when used in populations living with chronic stress or in conditions of poverty. 11 Validation studies should examine whether screening tools perform differently in the antenatal and postnatal periods, their reliability among low literacy populations, and any differences according to whether tools are self-completed or questions are read out by interviewers. Secondly, there is a need to broaden the focus of current evidence. For example, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and anxiety disorders including panic disorder and phobias in the perinatal period have been relatively under-researched in India as elsewhere globally. Similarly, somatization disorder-a common expression of emotional distress among women in Indiahas not been sufficiently studied among pregnant or postpartum women and represents a further gap. Certain groupsnotably rural and marginalized populations, those living in low-income settings and those with low levels of literacyare among the most vulnerable to experiencing CMD. Yet the voices of these women are seldom heard: these groups remain under-represented and efforts must be made to render future research more inclusive. 5 Thirdly, systematic studies to assess the prevalence of CMD antenatally are needed: many postnatal mental disorders have their onset during pregnancy, and few studies assess the problem in a prospective manner from early pregnancy through to the postpartum period. Much of the burden could be averted through effective detection and management of CMD antenatally. Finally, there is uncertainty regarding the extent to which perinatal CMD is associated with the perinatal state per se, as few studies have directly compared perinatal and non-perinatal women of reproductive age from the same setting. Addressing these evidence gaps is essential to improve understanding of perinatal CMD in India, facilitate diagnosis and be better positioned to offer appropriate support and treatment to women. Screening for perinatal mental disorders should occur in maternal health and obstetric settings by healthcare workers including midwives, nurses and primary care doctors. In order for screening initiatives to be scalable, tools should therefore be reliable, simple and quick to administer and have established cut-offs to facilitate stepped-care treatment. Managing perinatal CMD can also improve child outcomes, particularly in LMICs where associations between maternal mental disorders and adverse infant outcomes are exacerbated by exposure to additional socio-economic adversities. 12 The need to identify effective means of detection and management of CMD among women in India has become increasingly urgent in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has disproportionately impacted upon women and heightened levels of anxiety and other mental disorders. 13 This protocol outlines our study on perinatal mental health in two sites in India. Our study aims to improve understanding of CMD among perinatal and non-perinatal women in India, with the long-term goals of developing reliable detection methods to enable early identification, referral and support for women with CMD. The research questions and objectives the study seeks to address are listed in Table 1 . The study will assess the following types of CMD: depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, PTSD, somatization disorder and suicidality. The study objectives will be achieved using a mixed-methods observational design comprising three consecutive phases: (i) qualitative study, (ii) validation study and (iii) prospective cohort study, as described in further detail below. This study is embedded within the Maternal and Perinatal Health Research Collaboration India (MaatHRI), a collaboration between the National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit (NPEU), University of Oxford and fifteen hospitals across five states in India. 14 The study will be conducted by the Departments of Clinical Psychology and Psychiatry, National Institute for Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS), Bangalore, Karnataka; and Dr Rajendra Prasad Government Medical College (DRPGMC), Tanda, Himachal Pradesh. At each site, perinatal women (women who are currently pregnant or up to 12 months post-partum) and non-perinatal women (women who are not currently pregnant and have not given birth within the last 12 months) aged 18-45 years who are willing and able to participate will be invited to participate. The procedures involved in each of the study phases are summarized in Table 2 . Phase 1 is a qualitative study consisting of Table 1 Study phases with research questions and objectives to be addressed • Which are the most appropriate and culturally acceptable screening tools for CMD among perinatal and non-perinatal women in the two study settings? • Identify appropriate and culturally acceptable screening tools for the detection of CMD in two low-income settings in India • Elicit women's knowledge and understanding of CMD in these settings • What is the psychometric validity of selected CMD screening tools among perinatal and non-perinatal women in these settings? • Validate screening tools for CMD in perinatal and non-perinatal women against a gold standard. • What is the prevalence and incidence of CMD among perinatal and non-perinatal women and what is the likely burden of CMD attributable to the perinatal state? • What are the risk factors for CMDs among perinatal and non-perinatal women and do they differ between the two groups? • Determine prevalence and incidence of CMD among perinatal and non-perinatal women in two low-income settings in India • Identify risk factors associated with CMD among perinatal and non-perinatal women individual interviews and focus group discussions (FGD) to seek feedback on selected CMD screening tools and explore knowledge around CMD. Participants will first complete an individual interview. Women will be shown a selection of CMD screening tools and asked for their views on these tools, including their thoughts on the wording of the questions, the response scales and the perceived user-friendliness of the tool. Next, participants will join an FGD during which the screening tools will be discussed further. Any preferences for certain tools will be explored. We will conduct separate FGD with pregnant, post-partum and non-perinatal women in order to elicit views specific to each of these groups. FGD participants will be recruited from the same settings as participants of the following two phases. CMD screening tools will be selected though discussion between study investigators including psychiatrists and clinical psychologists with extensive experience of conducting mental health interviews with local communities. We will also consult the published literature and consider the results of a systematic review of validated CMD screening tools in perinatal women in India, conducted by members of the study team. 9 Potential screening tools under consideration are listed in Table 3 . Tools, which are not already available in Hindi, Urdu or Kannada, will be translated following WHO guidelines for the translation and adaptation of instruments, including forwardtranslation and back-translation by a panel of mental health specialists fluent in Hindi/Urdu/Kannada and English. 18 We will include 24-32 women per study site in Phase 1. At each site, we will conduct a minimum of two FGDs with perinatal women and two FGDs with non-perinatal women. Each FGD will include 6-8 women. The number of FGDs was determined by evidence suggesting that more than 80% of all themes to emerge from group discussions are discoverable within two to three focus groups. 24 If data saturation has not been achieved, a third FGD will be conducted. A maximum of eight participants per group provides optimal data richness, facilitates group moderation, identification of individual voices within the group, seeking of clarifications and exploration of differences in opinions. 25 Audio recordings of individual interviews and FGDs will be transcribed verbatim and translated into English. Inductive thematic analysis of the data will be conducted using the six consecutive phases described by Braun and Clarke (2006) : familiarization with the data, generation of initial codes, search for themes, review of themes, definition and naming of themes and production of the report. 26 A 'buddy system' will be used whereby one researcher will analyze and code data first. A 'buddy' will use the codes identified by the first researcher and apply these to a sample of the transcripts to check the reliability of coding and enhance consistency. The 'one sheet of paper' (OSOP) method of analysis will be used to help with the grouping of issues arising from the data into broader themes. 27 Analyses will be conducted using NVIVO qualitative data analysis software. 28 Results of this qualitative phase will be used to inform the selection of tools for Phase 2 and the collection of data on potential risk factors and confounders for Phase 3. Phase 2 is a cross-sectional validation study. We will use Phase 1 outcomes to select CMD screening tools to be formally validated against a gold standard. In accordance with WHO guidelines for the translation and adaptation of instruments, we will conduct pre-testing and cognitive interviewing of the tools. 18 Cognitive interviews will be conducted with a small group of participants who will be asked to complete the screening tools. An interviewer will then go through each item of the screening tools with the participant to explore how they interpreted each question. This will help us to understand whether translated screening tools have been clearly and appropriately translated and assess whether semantic equivalence has been maintained. Any necessary modifications will be made to ensure the tools are culturally appropriate. 18 Next, we will conduct the main validation component. This will involve a larger group of participants. Each participant will be asked to complete a sociodemographic questionnaire, a number of CMD screening tools and finally a diagnostic interview administered by a trained clinician. The CMD screening tools will be selected on the basis of Phase 1 results. The Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI), 29 which has been widely used in India and will allow for direct comparison with the National Mental Health Survey of India, 30 will be used as the diagnostic interview. The MINI will be conducted by an interviewer who is blinded to screening tool results. At each site, ten women will be included in cognitive interviews and a minimum of 150 pregnant, 150 postpartum and 150 non-perinatal women will be included in the main validation component. These are the minimum sample sizes recommended to reliably determine psychometric properties and assess the validity and reliability of screening tools. 31, 32 Analysis Results of cognitive interviews will be in the form of interviewer notes. These will be discussed with expert colleagues and feedback will be used to develop final, translated versions of the screening tools. In the main validation component, women diagnosed with CMD on diagnostic interview will be considered a 'true' case. Mean scores on screening tools will be compared between women with and without true CMD to test the construct validity of screening tools. 33 Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative likelihood ratios and the proportion of true cases correctly identified will be calculated for each cut-off value of the screening tools. Accuracy of screening tools will be evaluated using a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve, and reliability will be assessed using Cronbach's alpha. Youden's index, the value at which [(sensitivity + specificity)-1] is maximized, will be used to identify the point of optimal balance between sensitivity and specificity and thus be recommended as a cut-off for use in the local population. Data will be analyzed separately for pregnant, post-partum and non-perinatal women. Statistical analyses will be conducted using STATA. 34 Phase 3 will be a prospective cohort study. At each study site, we will recruit (i) perinatal women ('exposed' group) and (ii) non-perinatal women ('unexposed' group). Women in the perinatal group will be asked to attend in early pregnancy (estimated gestational age (EGA) <20 weeks); in late pregnancy (EGA >28 weeks); at three months post-partum; and at six months post-partum. Non-perinatal women will be followed-up at the equivalent time intervals. At each visit, participants will be asked to complete CMD screening tools, which will be selected on the basis of Phase 2 results. Any woman who screens positive on any screening tool will require further clinical assessment; those confirmed as having a mental disorder will be offered treatment and follow-up as appropriate. The cut-offs for each screening tool used in this phase will have been determined during the validation study. At the first visit, participants will also be asked to complete a socio-demographic questionnaire, which will include data on potential confounders as identified by reviewing the existing literature. We calculated that a minimum sample size of 1166 (583 perinatal and 583 non-perinatal) women at each site is required to demonstrate a 10% difference in the prevalence of CMD between perinatal and non-perinatal women. 35 This assumes: best-estimate CMD prevalence of 10.7% among non-perinatal women 36 and 20% among perinatal women; 5 5% level of significance; 80% power for a two-sided test; 85% retention rate over the study period; and a design coefficient of 1.29. 37 Sample size was based on prevalence calculations because this is the primary outcome. Furthermore, this sample size is larger than what is required for risk factor analysis; our target sample size allows for multivariable regression models with up to 20 exposure variables. The presence of a mental disorder will be defined by scores above the cut-off on CMD screening tools. Point prevalence, period prevalence and incidence of CMD will be estimated in perinatal and non-perinatal groups as follows. Prevalence and incidence of CMD will be presented separately for each type of CMD (e.g. incidence of anxiety; prevalence of depression) and as a composite measure (e.g. prevalence of CMD). Univariable logistic regression analyses will be performed to calculate odds ratios to identify factors associated with CMD. Potential associated factors will be selected a priori on the basis of evidence from existing studies. Variables with Pvalues <0.10 will be included in a multivariable model built using forward-stepwise approach. We will use linearized or robust standard errors to adjust for clustering at the village level. If there is missing data, a complete case analysis will be conducted. Statistical advice will be sought during the analysis stage of the research as required. Participants will be recruited from community settings in areas served by the two host institutions. These will include women living in low-income settings in both urban and rural areas. Recruitment at each site will be carried out by a study team of research nurses who will liaise with Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs), Auxiliary Nurse Midwives (ANMs) and Anganwadi workers at urban and rural subcentres and health and nutrition (Anganwadi) centres. Nonperinatal women will be recruited through the same procedure as well as through 'snowballing', by asking perinatal women to identify any friends, relatives or neighbours who are of reproductive age and living in the same communities who are not currently pregnant and have not given birth within the past 12 months. Printed information sheets will be available, but as this is a low-literacy population and based on the prior research experience of the study team in similar communities, verbal explanations will form the main mode of information giving. Verbal explanations will detail the nature and purpose of the study; what the study will involve for the participant including the number and duration of visits required; the implications and constraints of the protocol; what the data in the study will be used for and any potential risks involved in taking part. It will be clearly stated that participants are free to withdraw from the study at any time, for any reason, without prejudice to future care and with no obligation to provide a reason for withdrawal. Those who choose to participate will be asked to sign the informed consent form or provide a thumbprint. Many of the women included in this study are likely to live in poverty and many may have low levels of literacy. In the context of Covid-19, living conditions and household incomes have become even more precarious. These vulnera-bilities raise a number of ethical issues. Women we approach may not have engaged in research studies before and may not be aware of what participation entails. Care will be taken to ensure the study is explained clearly and without scientific or research jargon to enable women to autonomously decide whether to take part. Some women may feel coerced into participating from feelings of obligation, fear of discrimination or other assumed negative consequences of non-participation. Financial compensation for participation is a contested issue: if compensation is high relative to local earnings this may create an economic incentive to participate, complicating the concept of truly autonomous consent. However, for women living in poverty loss of earnings is an important consideration. Women with young children or other dependents will also be inconvenienced by participation in the study. We have therefore decided to offer all participants a payment valued at the equivalent of a daily wage at each study visit as an appreciation of their time. As part of the study, we will identify women experiencing CMD. At both sites, referral mechanisms to mental health services are in place with capacity to deal with a potential increase in referrals. Any suspected or confirmed instances of abuse will be handled using standard operating procedures (SOP) as used in previous research in perinatal women at the NIMHANS site. SOPs are in place for two situations: domestic violence and suicidal risk. These include risk assessment and referral to appropriate agencies and services. We will only proceed with the research study when it is safe to do so and when the safety of participants is not jeopardized through travel or contact with others. We will follow local Covid-19 guidance as issued by collaborating institutions and ensure that all contact with participants occurs in line with national guidance. Ethics approval has been granted by the University of Oxford and DRPGMC Institutional Ethics Committee (IEC) and is awaited from NIMHANS IEC and India's Health Ministry's Screening Committee. The findings of this study will include: women's feedback on the usability and appropriateness of selected CMD screening tools; women's views and knowledge around CMD; assessments of the psychometric validity of CMD screening tools (including sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values and optimal cut-offs of screening tools); prevalence and incidence of anxiety disorders, depressive disorders, suicidality, PTSD and somatization disorder among perinatal and non-perinatal women; and risk factors associated with these CMD. Maternal health and mental health are among the most significant contributors to persisting inequalities and morbidity and mortality globally. Perinatal CMD affects a significant proportion of women, with the highest burden carried by LMIC. Conditions such as perinatal depression and perinatal anxiety are associated with poor maternal and infant outcomes. Early detection through screening coupled with effective treatment can improve outcomes. It is essential, however, that screening tools are locally validated and culturally appropriate to ensure women with CMD can be identified. Data from this study will make a significant contribution to existing knowledge around CMD in women of reproductive age. This study will provide new knowledge on the identification of CMD across both perinatal and non-perinatal women in Karnataka and Himachal Pradesh. The screening tools we translate and validate will have potential for use in routine antenatal and postnatal care in our study settings, which scope to improve the detection of CMD in our populations. Our data will provide CMD prevalence and incidence along with associated risk factors. In particular, our study will shed light on PTSD and somatization disorder, which have been underresearched in perinatal populations in LMIC to date. Finally, by including both perinatal and non-perinatal women, the study will provide important and novel insights into the role of the perinatal state as an independent contributor to mental disorders. A limitation of the study is that we may not cover all income groups and educational levels among participants recruited into the study. Another limitation is that our study currently extends to six months post-partum, which precludes the investigation of infant outcomes beyond this period that may be associated with maternal CMD. However, we plan to seek additional funding to allow for longer follow-up of women and their infants in order to assess further trends in women's mental health and associations with infant and child outcomes. A potential challenge we may have is attrition during the cohort study. Many women travel between their natal home and their partner's home, which can lead to drop out from the study. Women recruited in early pregnancy may also experience pregnancy losses such as abortion. To address these challenges, robust systems will be developed at the time of recruitment to the cohort study to include women who have lived in the area for at least five years. We will also collect sufficient contact details to maximize follow-up, for example through telephone follow-up if necessary. Improving the understanding, detection and management of CMD among women is key to improving women's health and promoting gender equality. The National Health Mission of India has established initiatives to include screening for mental health in maternal health settings. 8 In order to do this effectively, there is a need for validated tools in local languages for different population groups. In addition, the study will provide incidence and risk factor data for perinatal CMD from two different parts of India and a better understanding of the specific contribution of the perinatal state to these conditions. In the longer term, there is potential to examine associations between perinatal CMD and infant outcomes and to develop culturally appropriate interventions to effectively prevent and treat CMD. Oxford-India Sustainable Centre, Somerville College, University of Oxford. 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