Study Reveals Hardy Nutritionals’ Daily Essential Nutrients Improves Mental Health in Pregnant Women and Optimizes Baby Outcomes
RAYMOND, AB, June 3, 2024 /PRNewswire/ – A groundbreaking 12-week fully blinded, randomized, controlled trial known as the NUTRIMUM study, recently published in the British Journal of Psychiatry (BJPsych Open), highlights the efficacy and safety of Hardy Nutritionals’ Daily Essential Nutrients (DEN) in treating symptoms of antenatal depression. A follow-up study compared the health of the babies born to mothers taking DEN against babies from healthy mothers taking regular prenatal vitamins and/or pharmaceutical antidepressants. This research provides compelling evidence that this broad-spectrum micronutrient formula offers significant benefits over antidepressants and regular prenatal supplements for pregnant women and their babies.
Key Findings for the Mothers:
Daily Essential Nutrients (DEN) significantly improved both self-rated and clinician-rated depression, global functioning, and sleep quality in pregnant women relative to placebo controls, with nearly double the number of women taking micronutrients identifying themselves as being “much” or “very much” improved. Women with personality difficulties benefited the most from the micronutrients (i.e. those with difficulty making & keeping friends, impulsive, untrusting, short-tempered, worriers, perfectionists).
The researchers concluded that the micronutrients were safe, and the “outcomes were comparable to those obtained using psychotherapy but achieved with much less contact.” Furthermore, improvements in global functioning show that “the impact of micronutrients is likely not specific to one dimension of pathology (e.g. depression), but may better serve as an overall metabolic tune-up.” “These findings align with the growing body of literature highlighting the potential advantage of an abundant nutritional environment in improving brain health.”
For full access, see the following link:
Key Findings for the Babies:
Babies from moms who took DEN for depression during pregnancy were significantly better off than newborns from moms taking pharmaceutical antidepressants on 6 out of 7 physiological and neurological measures (habituation to disturbances, orientation to sights and sounds, motor control, regulation of state, autonomic stability, and normal reflexes).
The “DEN babies” even outperformed babies from otherwise healthy, unmedicated moms on 3 of the 7 measures (habituation to disturbances, motor control, and autonomic stability)!
Micronutrient-exposed infants were also more likely to be carried to full term than infants from healthy, unmedicated mothers and mothers taking antidepressants, which bodes well for the lifelong outcomes of the child.
For full access, see the following link:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378378224000173?via%3Dihub
Holistic Approach to Mental Health in Pregnancy
The researchers determined that the micronutrients successfully improved psychological functioning in the mothers and birth outcomes for the infants, mitigating some of the known risks to infants which can result from antenatal depression in the mothers.
The comprehensive nature of Daily Essential Nutrients, which includes a wide range of vitamins and minerals, supports overall mental health and well-being. This holistic approach addresses the nutritional deficiencies that often contribute to depressive symptoms, providing a more natural and balanced treatment option.
The researchers postulated that the benefits of Daily Essential Nutrients compared to typical over-the-counter prenatal supplements may be due to “a higher dose [and a]more balanced variety of nutrients.”
“Overall, our results indicate that micronutrient supplementation given above the Recommended Dietary Allowance during pregnancy appears safer relative to existing treatment options for women with depression and may even launch these infants to a better start in life.”
Note: There are no financial ties between Hardy Nutritionals and the University of Canterbury or any of the researchers.
Sources:
1. “Efficacy and safety of a mineral and vitamin treatment on symptoms of antenatal depression: 12-week fully blinded randomized placebo-controlled trial (NUTRIMUM)”
Journal: BJPsych Open
Authors: Hayley A. Bradley, Elena Moltchanova, Roger T. Mulder, Lesley Dixon, Jacki Henderson, and Julia J. Rucklidge
2. “Effect of antenatal micronutrient or antidepressant exposure on Brazelton neonatal behavioral assessment scale within 1 month of birth”
Journal: Early Human Development
Authors: Campbell et al.
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SOURCE Hardy Nutritionals