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A randomized controlled trial of yoga for pregnant women with symptoms of depression and anxiety
Complementary therapies in clinical practice
Short Title: Complement.Ther.Clin.Pract.
Format: Journal Article
Publication Date: Nov 30, 2014
Pages: 166 - 172
Sources ID: 69291
Notes: LR: 20150810; CI: Published by Elsevier Ltd.; JID: 101225531; OTO: NOTNLM; 2015/04/22 00:00 [received]; 2015/06/05 00:00 [revised]; 2015/06/05 00:00 [accepted]; 2015/08/11 06:00 [entrez]; 2015/08/11 06:00 [pubmed]; 2016/02/27 06:00 [medline]; ppublish
Visibility: Public (group default)
Abstract: (Show)
BACKGROUND: Yoga may be well suited for depressed and anxious pregnant women, given reported benefits of meditation and physical activity and pregnant women's preference for nonpharmacological treatments. METHODS: We randomly assigned 46 pregnant women with symptoms of depression and anxiety to an 8-week yoga intervention or treatment-as-usual (TAU) in order to examine feasibility and preliminary outcomes. RESULTS: Yoga was associated with high levels of credibility and satisfaction as an intervention for depression and anxiety during pregnancy. Participants in both conditions reported significant improvement in symptoms of depression and anxiety over time; and yoga was associated with significantly greater reduction in negative affect as compared to TAU (beta = -0.53, SE = 0.20, p = .011). CONCLUSION: Prenatal yoga was found to be a feasible and acceptable intervention and was associated with reductions in symptoms of anxiety and depression; however, prenatal yoga only significantly outperformed TAU on reduction of negative affect.