Stress and Psychopathology Reduction in Pregnant Women through Online Cognitive Behavioural Therapy during COVID-19: A Feasibility Study Puertas González, José Antonio Mariño Narváez, Carolina Romero González, Borja Peralta Ramírez, María Isabel Cognitive behavioural therapy Pregnancy Resilience Stress Online therapy Background: The global pandemic has affected the psychological health of the population, including pregnant women. Due to the difficulty of offering conventional therapies to reduce stress in this population, studies are needed to show the effect of online therapies. Therefore, the objective was to test the effect of online cognitive behavioural therapy in pregnant women during the pandemic on the main variables of stress and psychopathology. Methods: The sample consisted of 16 pregnant women who participated in a weekly cognitive behavioural intervention for 8 weeks. Prenatal concerns, general stress, stress vulnerability, resilience and psychopathology were assessed. Results: The results show a reduction in prenatal concerns, perceived stress, stress vulnerability and psychopathology, as well as an increase in resilience. Conclusions: Online cognitive behavioural intervention may be effective in pregnant women, so it is important to conduct a randomised controlled trial to certify these findings. 2021-07-14T08:38:23Z 2021-07-14T08:38:23Z 2021 journal article Puertas-Gonzalez, J.A.; Mariño-Narvaez, C.; Romero-Gonzalez, B.; Peralta-Ramirez, M.I. Stress and Psychopathology Reduction in Pregnant Women through Online Cognitive Behavioural Therapy during COVID-19: A Feasibility Study. Behav. Sci. 2021, 11, 100. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs11070100 http://hdl.handle.net/10481/69681 10.3390/bs11070100 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/ open access Atribución 3.0 España MDPI