Brigitte Ramsauer
University of Hamburg
20 Papers
86 Citations
Brigitte Ramsauer is an academic researcher from University of Hamburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Postpartum depression & Maternal sensitivity. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 19 publications.
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Papers
Observational Tools for Measuring Parent–Infant Interaction: A Systematic Review
Annett Lotzin,Xiaoxing Lu,Levente Kriston,Julia Schiborr,Teresa Musal,Georg Romer,Brigitte Ramsauer +6 more
TL;DR: The existing observational tools for assessing parent–infant interaction were identified and described, and their psychometric soundness was evaluated, and synthesized validity evidence and descriptions of the tools reported in this review might guide clinicians and researchers in the selection of an appropriate tool.
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Parental Reflective Functioning Affects Sensitivity to Distress in Mothers with Postpartum Depression
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of maternal reflective functioning on sensitivity during the mother-infant interaction was examined in a clinical sample of 50 mothers who were experiencing postpartum depression and their infants aged three to 10 months.
Child-focused maternal mentalization: A systematic review of measurement tools from birth to three
TL;DR: In this article, a systematic review of measurement tools for maternal mentalization is presented by systematically searching and summarizing available instruments and providing a detailed content description, and the number of identified instruments was n = 15.
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Randomized controlled trial of the Circle of Security-Intensive intervention for mothers with postpartum depression: maternal unresolved attachment moderates changes in sensitivity.
Brigitte Ramsauer,Christine Mühlhan,Annett Lotzin,Sandra Achtergarde,Jessica Terese Mueller,Stephanie Krink,Anne Tharner,Fabienne Becker-Stoll,Tobias Nolte,Georg Romer +9 more
TL;DR: In COS-I, unresolved-mothers exhibited significantly more change in sensitivity than non-unresolved- mothers, whereas in TAU, the opposite was true, which may help to optimize clinical use of Cos-I.
Parenting stress and postpartum depression/anxiety in mothers with personality disorders: indications for differential intervention priorities
TL;DR: The results illustrate the need for more differentiated treatment options for mothers with postpartum depression and/or anxiety disorders with PD to prevent later development of psychopathology in children of these mothers.
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