Wellcome Open Research (Nov 2024)

Yoga-based lifestyle intervention for antenatal depression (YOGA-D): study protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial [version 2; peer review: 2 approved, 1 approved with reservations]

  • Rahul Kunkulol,
  • Nilam Behere,
  • Shirley Telles,
  • Rahul Shidhaye,
  • Hemant Bhargav,
  • Vidyadhar Bangal,
  • Swanand Tilekar,
  • Kalpesh Game,
  • Vaibhav Murhar,
  • Suryabhan Gore,
  • Chitra Thanage,
  • Kalyani Shinde,
  • Shamal Talole,
  • Unnati Thete,
  • Swapnali Palande,
  • Geeta Gholap,
  • Sonali Shelke,
  • Soni Gargade,
  • Suchita Nisal

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Background Depression during pregnancy is associated with pre-term labor, low birthweight, post-partum depression and adverse child outcomes. There are concerns about the safety of anti-depressant medications during pregnancy. Many pregnant women with antenatal depression are neither aware about their depression nor do they have access to non-pharmacological interventions for depression. Evidence suggests that pre-natal yoga can improve antenatal depression. Yoga is native to the Indian culture and women can practice yoga as a ‘self-care’ intervention with minimal training. There is no study till date on the efficacy of yoga on antenatal depression in pregnant women in a low resource (rural) setting in India. This pilot randomized controlled trial aims to study the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of a YOGA -based lifestyle intervention for Antenatal D epression (YOGA-D) in Maharashtra, India. Methods We will undertake a single-blind individual randomized parallel group-controlled pilot trial with 1:1 allocation ratio. Adult women with 12–26 weeks of pregnancy, without any obstetric or medical complications will be randomly allocated to either the active intervention group (Yoga-Sanskar (YS)) or the Enhanced Usual Care (EUC) group. Trained yoga instructors will teach a pre-defined yoga sequence to the participants in the YS arm. In the EUC arm, participants will receive a single session of health education. We will assess trial feasibility using the recruitment, retention, and study completion rates. The primary outcome of depression will be measured using the translated Marathi version of the Patient Health Questionnaire-9. Assessments will be at the baseline, three-months post-randomization, and post-delivery. Discussion This study will help us to understand the barriers in implementation of a yoga-based intervention for antenatal depression in a low-resource/rural setting in Maharashtra, India. Based on the learnings of this pilot trial, we plan to undertake an explanatory randomized controlled trial in the next few months. Registration CTRI (CTRI/2024/05/067176; 10/05/2024).

Keywords