학술논문

Patterns of maternal depression, anxiety, and stress symptoms from pregnancy to 5 years postpartum in an Australian cohort experiencing adversity.
Document Type
Article
Source
Archives of Women's Mental Health. Dec2021, Vol. 24 Issue 6, p987-997. 11p. 1 Diagram, 4 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*ADVERSE health care events
*MENTAL depression risk factors
*PREGNANCY & psychology
*POSTPARTUM depression
*PSYCHOLOGY of mothers
*COMPARATIVE studies
*RISK assessment
*MENTAL depression
*AT-risk people
*ANXIETY
*PRENATAL care
*PSYCHOLOGICAL stress
*LONGITUDINAL method
Language
ISSN
1434-1816
Abstract
The objective of this study is to describe the longitudinal patterns of depression, anxiety, and stress symptoms from pregnancy to 5 years postpartum, in a cohort of Australian mothers experiencing adversity. Longitudinal data were drawn from the control group of a trial of nurse home visiting. Pregnant women experiencing adversity (≥ 2 of 10 adversity risk factors) were recruited from antenatal clinics across 2 Australian states (30 April 2013–29 August 2014). Women completed the Depression Anxiety and Stress Scales short-form (DASS-21) at 11 time-points from pregnancy to 5 years postpartum. DASS-21 scores were summarized at each time-point for all women and by level of adversity risk. Three hundred fifty-nine women (100%) completed the DASS-21 in pregnancy and 343 (96%) provided subsequent data. Mental health symptoms were highest in pregnancy and at 4 and 5 years postpartum. While this pattern was comparable across levels of antenatal adversity risk, women with greatest adversity risk had consistently higher mental health symptoms. In a cohort of mothers experiencing adversity, depression, anxiety, and stress symptoms were highest in pregnancy and at 4 to 5 years postpartum. The striking patterns of persistent, high, mental health symptoms, beyond the first year postpartum, can inform a more equitable and responsive health system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]