# Exposure to and Engagement With Digital Psychoeducational Content and Community Related to Maternal Mental Health by Perinatal Persons and Mothers: Protocol for a Web-Based Survey With Optional Follow-Up

**Authors:** Molly E Waring, Katherine E McManus-Shipp, Christiana M Field, Sandesh Bhusal, Asley Perez, Olivia Shapiro, Sophia A Gaspard, Cindy-Lee Dennis

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/64075 · JMIR Research Protocols · 2025-04-30

## TL;DR

This study explores how mothers and perinatal individuals engage with digital mental health resources and community through the Momwell platform.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel web-based survey protocol to assess engagement with digital maternal mental health content and its impact on mental health outcomes.

## Key findings

- Most participants followed Momwell on Instagram, listened to the podcast, or received the newsletter.
- Participants had been exposed to Momwell's content for at least 6 months across platforms.
- The study will provide insights into how digital content supports maternal mental health during and after pregnancy.

## Abstract

Leveraging digital platforms may be an effective strategy for connecting perinatal persons and mothers with evidence-based information and support related to maternal mental health and peers. Momwell is a mom-centered model of care that provides psychoeducational content through several digital platforms, including social media, a podcast, and a blog. The aims of this project were to describe how perinatal persons and mothers engage with Momwell’s psychoeducational content and community; describe the perceived benefits of exposure to and engagement with content and community; examine associations between engagement with digital psychoeducational content and maternal mental health, parenting attitudes, and interparental relationships; and examine changes in mental health and parenting attitudes and concurrent engagement with Momwell’s digital psychoeducational content and community over 2 to 3 months.

This paper aims to describe the design of a study of perinatal persons and mothers who are exposed to or engage with Momwell’s psychoeducational content and community and describe sample characteristics.

Adults who engaged with Momwell on any of their digital platforms were recruited to complete a web-based survey in July 2023 to September 2023. Participants completed either a longer or shorter survey. Participants who provided permission to be recontacted were invited to complete a second survey 2 to 3 months later. The surveys included validated psychological measures, study-specific quantitative questions, and open-ended questions that assessed participant demographics, exposure to and engagement with Momwell’s psychoeducational content and community, maternal mental health, parenting relationships, parenting self-efficacy, and additional psychosocial and health measures. We outline planned analyses to achieve the aims of the project.

Data collection occurred from July 2023 to September 2023 (N=584). A subset of participants completed the optional second survey in October 2023 to December 2023 (N=246). Participants were >99% mothers (582/584, 99.7%); 45.5% (266/584) perinatal (59/584, 10.1% pregnant; 210/584, 36% post partum); and, on average, aged 32.4 (SD 3.9) years. In total, 59.1% (345/584) were from the United States, 35.6% (208/584) were from Canada, and 5.3% (31/584) were from other countries. The vast majority (552/584, 94.5%) followed Momwell on Instagram, 44.2% (258/584) listened to the Momwell podcast, and 41.1% (240/584) received their newsletter. Most participants had been exposed to Momwell’s psychoeducational content for at least 6 months across the different platforms (range 16/36, 44% on TikTok to 480/552, 87% on Instagram).

Data from this study will provide insights into how pregnant persons and mothers use digital psychoeducational content and peer communities to support their mental health throughout the perinatal period and into the early years of motherhood. Leveraging digital platforms to disseminate evidence-based digital psychoeducational content related to maternal mental health and connect peers has the potential to change how we care for perinatal persons and mothers.

DERR1-10.2196/64075

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Mental (MESH:D008607)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

63 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12079072/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12079072