The Effects of Listening to Lullabies and Self-selected Music on Distress and Maternal Attachment in Pregnant Women: A Randomized Controlled Study.

TitleThe Effects of Listening to Lullabies and Self-selected Music on Distress and Maternal Attachment in Pregnant Women: A Randomized Controlled Study.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsBaltacı N, Koç E, Yüksekol ÖDoğan, Çokyeter B
JournalAltern Ther Health Med
Date Published2022 Nov 18
ISSN1078-6791
Abstract

CONTEXT: Pregnant women may experience distress as a result of physical and psychosocial changes, and this distress affects the development of maternal attachment negatively. During pregnancy care and follow-up, reducing women's pregnancy-related distress and improving maternal attachment are important.

OBJECTIVE: To compare the effects of listening to lullabies and self-selected music in reducing distress and increasing maternal attachment in pregnant women.

DESIGN: This study is a randomized controlled trial. It was conducted using power analysis for a type-I error rate of α = 0.05, type-II error rate of β = 0.20, representative power of 0.64, and effect size of 0.81.

SETTING: The study took place at a secondary care hospital in a provincial center in Turkey.

PARTICIPANTS: The participants were 120 pregnant women who came to the outpatient clinic for pregnancy follow-ups between June 2021 and October 2021.

INTERVENTION: The participants were allocated to one of three groups, with 40 women in each. For 30 minutes every day, for two weeks, the lullaby group (LG) only listened to lullaby records at home, and the multi-music group (MG) listened to self-selected music from different records; the control group (CG) did not listen to any music.

OUTCOME MEASURES: The Prenatal Distress Questionnaire and the Maternal Antenatal Attachment Scale were used to collect data.

RESULTS: Prenatal distress levels were lower in the intervention groups than in the CG (P < .01), and they were lower in the MG than in the LG (P < .05). Antenatal attachment levels were higher in the intervention groups than in the CG (P < .01), and they were higher in the LG than in the MG (P < .05).

CONCLUSIONS: For pregnant women, listening to self-selected music was more effective in reducing distress, whereas listening to lullabies selected by the researcher was more effective in increasing attachment.

CLINICALTRIALS.GOV ID NUMBER: NCT05228392.

Alternate JournalAltern Ther Health Med
PubMed ID36399083