Literature DB >> 2309138

Psychosocial influences on new born outcomes: a controlled prospective study.

M D Pagel1, G Smilkstein, H Regen, D Montano.   

Abstract

This paper reports the results of a prospective investigation of 100 women during their pregnancies to test the hypothesis that social and psychological factors influence pregnancy outcome after controlling for demographic, biomedical, and lifestyle variables. Subjects completed questionnaires that assessed family social supports, life events, and anxiety. In addition, data were collected on general biomedical and pregnancy risk, lifestyle practices including smoking and drinking, as well as demographic information. Four infant outcomes, birthweight, gestational age, and 1 and 5 min Apgar scores, were studied via hierarchical multiple regression analyses for their relationship to the social and psychological variables, after controlling for all other sets of variables. The results of these analyses showed that life events stress accounted for significant variation in birthweight, and social supports and anxiety were associated with the two pediatric Apgar scores. Gestational age bore a simple relationship to anxiety, with higher anxiety predictive of lower gestational age. Further analyses revealed that women with either low social supports or high anxiety were, on the average, younger, more often single, of lower education level, had less income, smoked more, and had higher general biomedical risk than women with adequate social supports or lower anxiety. This suggests the multiple ways in which social and psychological risk factors may be related to pregnancy outcome and emphasizes the need for well controlled studies in this area.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2309138     DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(90)90158-o

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  34 in total

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Review 6.  Psychosocial stress in pregnancy and preterm birth: associations and mechanisms.

Authors:  Gabriel D Shapiro; William D Fraser; Martin G Frasch; Jean R Séguin
Journal:  J Perinat Med       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 1.901

7.  Family-centred HIV interventions: lessons from the field of parental depression.

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8.  Prenatal development in rural South Africa: relationship between birth weight and access to fathers and grandparents.

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Review 9.  Measuring stress before and during pregnancy: a review of population-based studies of obstetric outcomes.

Authors:  Whitney P Witt; Kristin Litzelman; Erika R Cheng; Fathima Wakeel; Emily S Barker
Journal:  Matern Child Health J       Date:  2014-01

10.  Paternal support and preterm birth, and the moderation of effects of chronic stress: a study in Los Angeles county mothers.

Authors:  Jo Kay C Ghosh; Michelle H Wilhelm; Christine Dunkel-Schetter; Christina A Lombardi; Beate R Ritz
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