Literature DB >> 21551396

Maternal depressive symptomatology: 16-month follow-up of infant and maternal health-related quality of life.

Janel M Darcy1, Joseph G Grzywacz, Rebecca L Stephens, Iris Leng, C Randall Clinch, Thomas A Arcury.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to document risk factors for depressive symptoms during the postpartum period among working mothers and to determine longitudinal effects of depressive symptoms on maternal health-related quality of life and infant health and development.
METHODS: Mother-infant dyads from a community-based cohort study of working mothers were recruited when infants were 4 months old and were interviewed every 4 months until infants were 16 months old. Depressive symptoms and health-related quality of life were assessed using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale and the Short Form-12 Health Survey, respectively. Infant development and health-related quality of life were measured with the Ages and Stages Questionnaire and the Infant-Toddler Quality of Life Questionnaire, respectively.
RESULTS: Depressive symptoms were elevated among mothers who were younger, less educated, African American, unmarried, and impoverished. Mothers with significant depressive symptoms had significantly poorer physical and mental health-related quality of life, reported greater pain for their infant, and had more health-related concerns about their child. Maternal depressive symptoms at 4 months predicted infant poorer health-related quality of life at 8, 12, and 16 months.
CONCLUSIONS: Several characteristics, including age, education level, race, marital status, and poverty, can help primary care physicians identify working mothers at risk for depressive symptoms. Identification of these symptoms is important; they are correlated with poorer maternal health-related quality of life and they predict poorer children's health-related quality of life.

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Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21551396      PMCID: PMC3114440          DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.2011.03.100201

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Board Fam Med        ISSN: 1557-2625            Impact factor:   2.657


  31 in total

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2.  Return to work, economic hardship, and women's postpartum health.

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Review 8.  Emerging risk factors for postpartum depression: serotonin transporter genotype and omega-3 fatty acid status.

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