Objective: The authors sought to determine whether a multicomponent, community-based program for preventing maternal depression also promotes engagement with mental health services for individuals with persistent symptoms.
Methods: Mothers of children enrolled in Head Start were randomly assigned between February 2011 and May 2016 to Problem-Solving Education (PSE) (N=111) or usual services (N=119) and assessed every two months for 12 months.
Results: Among 230 participants, 66% were Hispanic; 223 participants were included in the analysis. For all PSE participants, engagement with specialty mental health services increased from approximately 10% to 21% between two and 12 months. The PSE group was more likely than the control group to be engaged in specialty services at 12 months (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]=2.36, 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.07-5.20), and the rate of engagement with specialty services over time (treatment × time interaction) favored PSE (p=.016). Among PSE participants with persistent depressive symptoms over the follow-up period, engagement with specialty services increased from 12% (two months) to approximately 46% (12 months), whereas among control group participants, engagement fluctuated between 24% and 33%, without a clear trajectory pattern. At 12 months, PSE participants with persistent symptoms were more likely to engage with specialty care compared with their counterparts in the control group (AOR=6.95, CI=1.50-32.19). The treatment × time interaction was significant for the persistently symptomatic subgroup (p=.029) but not for the episodically symptomatic or the asymptomatic subgroups.
Conclusions: Embedding mental health programs in Head Start is a promising strategy to engage parents with depressive symptoms in care, especially those with persistent symptoms.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01298804.
Keywords: Community mental health services; Depression; Engagement with care; Maternal Depression; Prevention.