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Browsing by Author "Miller, Michelle L."
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Item Communal mastery and associations with depressive and PTSD symptomatology among urban trauma-exposed women.(APA, 2022-10) Miller, Michelle L.; Stevens, Natalie R.; Lowell, Gina S.; Hobfoll, Stevan E.; Psychiatry, School of MedicineObjective: Racial and ethnic minority women from low-resource urban communities experience disproportionately high rates of trauma exposure. Higher rates of lifetime trauma exposure are strongly associated with subsequent psychological sequela, specifically depression and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Communal mastery is the ability to cope with challenges and achieve goals by being closely interconnected with friends, family, and significant others. Yet, it is unknown if communal mastery is protective specifically against PTSD and depressive symptoms. Method: Participants (N = 131) were Black and Latina women (88.5% Black, mean monthly income: < $750) recruited from an urban outpatient obstetric-gynecological clinic at an academic medical center. Participants completed an online questionnaire that assessed trauma history, PTSD and depressive symptoms, types of individualistic coping, social support, and communal mastery. Results: Hierarchical multiple regression models demonstrated that communal mastery is uniquely associated with fewer PTSD symptoms (β = −.23, p = .003). More severe trauma history, more use of passive coping skills, and poorer social support were also significantly associated with PTSD symptoms, explaining over half of the variance in PTSD symptoms. Although significantly correlated, communal mastery was not uniquely associated with fewer depressive symptoms (β = −.13, p = .201). Conclusions: These findings suggest that connectedness as assessed through communal mastery serves as an important shield against the effects of traumatic stress for Black and Latina women. Future research would benefit by exploring interventions that aim to increase communal mastery in order to help highly trauma-exposed racial and ethnic minority women in low-resource environments.Item Examining psychological inflexibility as a mediator of postpartum depressive symptoms: A longitudinal observational study of perinatal depression(Elsevier, 2023) Thomas, Emily B. K.; Miller, Michelle L.; Grekin, Rebecca; O’Hara, Michael W.; Psychiatry, School of MedicineBackground: Depression is a common, serious complication during the postpartum period. Predictors of postpartum depression characterize who is at-risk for persistent symptoms. This study explored how psychological inflexibility affects depressive symptoms at 4 and 12 weeks postpartum. Methods: Participants receiving prenatal care at a medical center were recruited during the second trimester. Participants (n = 180) completed online assessments and diagnostic interviews during the third trimester (≥ 28 weeks gestation), and at 4-, 8-, and 12-weeks postpartum. Online assessments measured psychological inflexibility (PI) and depressive symptoms, while diagnostic interviews measured lifetime history of depression. Results: Mediation analysis examined pathways between 4-weeks postpartum depression, 8-weeks postpartum PI, and 12-weeks postpartum depression. Depressive symptoms at 4-weeks postpartum predicted PI at 8-weeks postpartum (β = 0.31, SE = 0.06, t(177) = 6.06, p < .001). Depressive symptoms at 4-weeks postpartum (β = 0.42, SE = 0.06, t(176) = 7.12, p < .001) and PI at 8-weeks postpartum (β = 0.32, SE = .08, t(176) = 4.09, p < .001) predicted depressive symptoms at 12-weeks postpartum. Depressive symptoms at 4-weeks, 8-week PI, and lifetime history of depression accounted for 42% of the variance in 12-week depressive symptoms (R2 = 0.42). The confidence interval of the indirect effect (0.04, 0.18) did not include zero, indicating significant mediation by PI. Conclusions: PI mediated the relation between 4- and 12-weeks postpartum depressive symptoms when controlling for lifetime history of depression. Psychological inflexibility is a transdiagnostic target for future prevention and intervention research during the postpartum period.Item Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorder Symptoms in the Perinatal Period: Prevalence and Associations with Postpartum Functioning(Springer, 2022) Miller, Michelle L.; Roche, Anne I.; Lemon, Elizabeth; O’Hara, Michael W.; Psychiatry, School of MedicinePurpose: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) symptoms are more likely to develop or be exacerbated during pregnancy and the postpartum period, which can cause significant distress and impairment. However, the disorders grouped with OCD in the DSM-5, obsessive-compulsive and related disorders (OCRD; e.g., hoarding disorder (HD), body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), trichotillomania (TTM), excoriation disorder (ED)), have rarely been examined in the perinatal period. This study aimed to explore: 1) the prevalence of all clinically significant OCRD symptoms in pregnancy and the postpartum period; and 2) the correlations between OCRD psychopathology and postpartum functioning. Methods: Participants were recruited during their second trimester of pregnancy from a Midwestern medical center. Participants completed an online questionnaire and a semi-structured clinical interview during pregnancy (28-32 weeks gestation, N =276) and the postpartum period (6-8 weeks, N =221). Results: BDD and OCD symptoms were the most prevalent. In pregnancy, 14.9% (N = 41) of participants endorsed clinically significant BDD symptoms and 6.2% (N = 17) endorsed clinically significant OCD symptoms. In the postpartum period, 11.8% (N = 26) endorsed clinically significant BDD symptoms and 14% (N = 31) endorsed clinically significant OCD symptoms. Poorer postpartum functioning was associated with elevated OCRD symptoms in pregnancy and postpartum. Conclusions: OCRD symptoms occur during pregnancy and the postpartum period at rates similar or higher than other life periods. Elevated OCRD symptoms are associated with poorer postpartum functioning across domains. Future research should explore how all OCRD symptoms may affect functioning in the perinatal period, not only OCD symptoms.Item The role of prenatal posttraumatic stress symptoms among trauma exposed women in predicting postpartum depression(Wiley, 2022) Grekin, Rebecca; Thomas, Emily B.K.; Miller, Michelle L.; O’Hara, Michael W.; Psychiatry, School of MedicineResearch suggests that a history of trauma and prenatal posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) are predictive of postpartum depression (PPD). Pregnant women at risk for PPD are often identified through depression symptom measures, while PTSS also may help to identify those at increased risk. Women who do not endorse depressive symptoms, though experience PTSS, may be missed when screening is exclusively based on depressive symptoms. The current study aimed to determine if prenatal PTSS were associated with PPD at 4- and 12-week postpartum in trauma-exposed women. Pregnant women (N = 230) in their third trimester were assessed for depression and PTSS at pregnancy, 4 and 12 weeks postpartum. Traumatic life events were assessed during pregnancy. Hierarchical regression analyses examined predictors of PPD, including history of depression, number of past traumas, and symptoms from the posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Checklist short-form (PCL-6). At 4 and 12 weeks postpartum, history of trauma and depression did not predict depressive symptoms, however, irritability and unwanted intrusive memories of trauma were predictive of increased depressive symptoms. Prenatal irritability and unwanted memories may be predictive of elevated PPD symptoms. Future research should examine whether these symptoms represent increased risk of postpartum depressive symptoms to improve screening, prevention, and treatment efforts.Item The Structure of Mood and Anxiety Symptoms in the Perinatal Period(Elsevier, 2023) Miller, Michelle L.; O’Hara, Michael W.; Psychiatry, School of MedicineBackground: The perinatal period is increasingly recognized as a vulnerable time for the development and exacerbation of psychiatric symptoms. Research has often focused on perinatal depression, with much less information on perinatal anxiety. This study examined the psychometric structure of all internalizing (anxiety and mood disorder symptoms) in the perinatal period. Methods: Participants were primarily community adults receiving prenatal care from an academic medical center (N = 246). Participants completed a structured clinical interview using the Interview for Mood and Anxiety Symptoms (IMAS) during pregnancy (28-32 weeks gestation) and the postpartum (6-8 weeks). Clinical interviews dimensionally assessed all current anxiety, mood, and obsessive-compulsive symptoms as well as lifetime psychiatric diagnoses. Results: Confirmatory factor analyses identified three latent factors onto which psychiatric symptoms loaded: Distress (depression, generalized anxiety, irritability, and panic symptoms), Fear (social anxiety, agoraphobia, specific phobia, and obsessive-compulsive symptoms), and Bipolar (mania and obsessive-compulsive symptoms) in both pregnancy and the postpartum. The fit statistics of the models indicated adequate to good fit in both models. Limitations: The IMAS is validated against the DSM-IV-TR rather than the DSM-5 and assessments of psychiatric symptoms were focused only on the current pregnancy. Conclusions: A three-factor model consisting of Distress, Fear and Bipolar latent factors was the best-fitting model in pregnancy and the postpartum period and showed stability across time. The structure of internalizing symptoms has important implications for future perinatal research and can be utilized to guide treatment by highlighting which psychiatric symptoms may be most similar during the perinatal period.Item Treating posttraumatic stress disorder at home in a single week using 1-week virtual massed cognitive processing therapy(Wiley, 2022) Held, Philip; Kovacevic, Merdijana; Petrey, Kelsey; Meade, Enya A.; Pridgen, Sarah; Montes, Mauricio; Werner, Brianna; Miller, Michelle L.; Smith, Dale L.; Kaysen, Debra; Karnik, Niranjan S.; Psychiatry, School of MedicinePosttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) treatments are increasingly delivered in massed formats and have shown comparable results to standard, weekly treatment. To date, massed cognitive processing therapy (CPT), delivered daily, has been delivered primarily in combination with adjunctive services and among veteran populations, but it has not been rigorously evaluated as a standalone intervention. The present study evaluated 1-week massed CPT delivered virtually (i.e., via telehealth) to a community sample of trauma-exposed individuals (N = 24). Using a single-arm open-label design, participants received CPT twice per day for 5 days. The results indicated that most participants completed treatment (n = 23, 95.8%), and no adverse events were reported. Participants exhibited large reductions in clinician-rated, d = 2.01, and self-reported PTSD symptoms, d = 2.55, as well as self-reported depressive symptoms, d = 1.46. On average, participants reported a 5-point PTSD symptom reduction and 1-point reduction in depressive symptoms for each treatment day. Reductions in PTSD and depressive symptoms were maintained at 3-month follow-up. Overall, 1-week massed CPT delivered virtually was shown to be feasible and to result in rapid symptom reductions that were sustained over time. Virtual massed CPT has the potential to increase access to effective treatments and help trauma survivors restore aspects of their lives in short amounts of time.