Digital Assessment of Wellbeing for New Parents (DAWN-P)
Participant type
Overview
This study is no longer looking for new participants but is still ongoing.
DAWN-P is a study to help identify postnatal depression in new parents through the use of smartphone app.
Summary
What is the study about? What are you trying to find out?
We’re conducting this study because around half of cases of postnatal depression are currently missed by health professionals. Around 17 mothers and 9 fathers in every 100 experience depression in the year after their baby’s birth. If postnatal depression is left untreated, it can be hugely disruptive for parents and their children, and also costly for the NHS.
Medication or talking therapy can successfully treat postnatal depression, but identifying who needs treatment is difficult, which is why we’re carrying out the DAWN-P study.
As most people of childbearing age (94%) own a smartphone, we developed a smartphone app that asks questions about parents’ daily mood to help identify postnatal depression quickly and efficiently. In 2020, we ran a small study and found this digital screening accurately identified parents needing postnatal depression treatment. Now we want to compare our digital screening app to usual NHS care in a type of study called a randomised controlled trial.
What does taking part involve?
This study is no longer looking for new participants but is still ongoing.
We aim to recruit 80 women and birthing people in late pregnancy (after 36 weeks of pregnancy) from St Mary’s Hospital and Whiston Hospital. We will divide these participants, by chance, into two groups of 40. The first group will receive usual NHS care. The second group will receive usual NHS care plus the digital screening app (until 8 weeks after the birth of the child). We will also invite up to 20 partners/fathers to use the app. We will gather information from all participants using questionnaires and phone interviews at three different points:
- when participants start the study;
- when their baby is 8 weeks old;
- when their baby is 6 months old.
The assessments will ask questions about mood, how participants use NHS resources, and the app itself. If a parent from either group has possible postnatal depression, they will receive an extra phone call assessment and signposting to further help. We will also conduct interviews with 30 women and birthing people from the group who were offered the app, as well as with 20 partners and 30 healthcare professionals.
The study launched on 31 August 2022 and will end on 31 December 2024. The study is open to new participants from 16 June 2023 to 31 March 2024. This means that only already enrolled participants can take part after March 2024.
Who is it for?
This study is no longer looking for new participants but is still ongoing.
Participants in the study must be at least 36 weeks pregnant.
Why is it important?
Participating in the study may help identify postnatal depression in new parents through the use of smartphone app.
How can I find out more?
You can visit the DAWN-P project website here.
This study is no longer looking for new participants but is still ongoing. However, if you have questions for the research team, click the button below to email the research team:
Meet the researcher
Emily EisnerResearch Fellow
My name is Dr Emily Eisner. I work as a Research Fellow at the University of Manchester and I have an Honorary Research Contract with GMMH.
My research investigates how smartphone apps may be used to promptly identify individuals needing extra support for their mental health. I work across several studies testing symptom monitoring apps for this purpose – both in samples with schizophrenia spectrum psychosis and samples at risk of postnatal depression.