Literature DB >> 21441544

Age at first birth, mode of conception and psychological wellbeing in pregnancy: findings from the parental age and transition to parenthood Australia (PATPA) study.

C A McMahon1, J Boivin, F L Gibson, K Hammarberg, K Wynter, D Saunders, J Fisher.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It is increasingly common for women in high-income countries to delay childbearing. We aimed to describe the context of pregnancy for first-time mothers of different ages and examine relationships among maternal age at first birth, mode of conception and psychosocial wellbeing in pregnancy.
METHODS: Using stratified sampling, we recruited similar numbers of women conceiving through assisted reproductive technology (ART; n = 297) or spontaneously (n = 295) across three age groups: younger, ≤ 20-30 years; middle, 31-36 years; older, ≥ 37 years. Women participated in a structured interview and completed validated questionnaires assessing socio-economic status, personality, quality of partner relationship, state and trait anxiety, pregnancy-focused (P-F) anxiety and maternal-fetal attachment.
RESULTS: Older maternal age was associated with lower depression and anxiety symptoms, lower maternal-fetal attachment (P< 0.05), greater psychological hardiness (resilience) (P< 0.001) and lower ratings of control in the partner relationship (P< 0.05) at a univariate level. ART conception, but not older maternal age, was associated with more P-F anxiety. Although most main effects of age and mode of conception became non-significant after controlling for contextual/reproductive history variables, a significant association between ART conception and more intense fetal attachment emerged (P< 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: Women having their first baby when older appear to have some psychological advantages over their younger counterparts; they are more resilient, report their partners as less controlling and report lower symptoms of depression and anxiety during pregnancy. However, women conceiving through ART have a more complex experience of pregnancy, simultaneously experiencing more P-F anxiety and more intense emotional attachment to the fetus.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21441544     DOI: 10.1093/humrep/der076

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Reprod        ISSN: 0268-1161            Impact factor:   6.918


  13 in total

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4.  Preventing postnatal depression: a causal mediation analysis of a 20-year preconception cohort.

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5.  Pictorial representation of attachment: measuring the parent-fetus relationship in expectant mothers and fathers.

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7.  Early Association Factors for Depression Symptoms in Pregnancy: A Comparison between Spanish Women Spontaneously Gestation and with Assisted Reproduction Techniques.

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8.  Age, mode of conception, health service use and pregnancy health: a prospective cohort study of Australian women.

Authors:  Jane Fisher; Karen Wynter; Karin Hammarberg; John McBain; Frances Gibson; Jacky Boivin; Catherine McMahon
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2013-04-08       Impact factor: 3.007

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10.  A Comparison of Postpartum Depression in Mothers Conceived by Assisted Reproductive Technology and Those Naturally Conceived.

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