| Literature DB >> 29306876 |
Gracia Fellmeth1,2, Emma H Plugge3, Verena Carrara2, Mina Fazel4, May May Oo2, Yuwapha Phichitphadungtham2, Mupawjay Pimanpanarak2, Naw Kerry Wai2, Oh Mu2, Prakaykaew Charunwatthana5, François Nosten2,3, Raymond Fitzpatrick1, Rose Mcgready2,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Perinatal depression is a significant contributor to maternal morbidity. Migrant women in resource-poor settings may be at increased risk, yet little research has been conducted in low-income and middle-income settings. This prospective cohort study of migrant women on the Thai-Myanmar border aims to establish prevalence of perinatal depression, identify risk factors for perinatal depression and examine associations with infant outcomes. PARTICIPANTS: Participating women are labour migrants and refugees living on the Thai-Myanmar border. A total of 568 women were recruited in their first trimester of pregnancy and are being followed up to 1-year postpartum. FINDINGS TO DATE: At baseline, women in our study had a median age of 25 years, the predominant ethnicity was Sgaw Karen (48.9%), agriculture was the main employment sector (39.2%) and educational attainment was low with a median of 4 years of education. In the first trimester of pregnancy, a quarter (25.8%; 95% CI 22.3 to 29.5) of all women were depressed as diagnosed by the Structured Clinical Interview for the Diagnosis of DSM-IV Disorders. FUTURE PLANS: Follow-up is ongoing and expected to continue until January 2018. The prevalence of depression at later stages of pregnancy and during the first postpartum year will be identified, and associations between depression status and demographic, social, migration-related, medical, obstetric and infant factors will be quantified. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02790905. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.Entities:
Keywords: maternal medicine; mental health; preventive medicine; public health
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29306876 PMCID: PMC5780720 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-017129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Map of study area showing refugee (∆) and migrant clinics (■) (Credit: Dr Verena Carrara, Shoklo Malaria Research Unit).
Timeline of data collection
| Time | Depression | Demographic and social | Medical factors | Obstetric factors | Infant factors | Infant bonding | ||
| SCID | RHS-15 | |||||||
| Pregnancy | ||||||||
| T1 | First trimester (EGA<14) | X | Full | X | ||||
| T2 | Second trimester (EGA 18–26) | X | DT | |||||
| T3 | Third trimester (EGA 28–38) | X | DT | X | ||||
| Postpartum | ||||||||
| T4 | One month postpartum | X | DT | X | X | X | X | |
| T5 | Three months postpartum | X | ||||||
| T6 | Six months postpartum | X | DT | X | X | |||
| T7 | Nine months postpartum | X | ||||||
| T8 | Twelve months postpartum | X | DT | X | X | X | ||
*At T1, the full RHS-15 was administered. At subsequent visits, only the distress thermometer (DT) component of the RHS-15 was administered.
EGA, estimated gestational age; RHS-15, Refugee Health Screener-15; SCID, Structured Clinical Interview for the Diagnosis of DSM-IV Disorders.
Figure 2Flow of participants through study from recruitment to T3. SMRU, Shoklo Malaria Research Unit.
Demographic characteristics of study participants at T1 (n=568)
| All | Missing | Labour migrant sites | Refugee camp | ||||
| MKT | WPA | P value* | MLA | P value* | |||
| Demographic | |||||||
| Age, med (range) | 25 (18–50) | 0 | 25 (18–45) | 26 (18–44) | 0.50 | 25 (18–50) | 0.98 |
|
| |||||||
| Burman | 161 (28.4) | 0 | 77 (47.2) | 82 (52.9) | 0.21 | 2 (0.8) |
|
| Sgaw Karen | 278 (48.9) | 61 (37.4) | 41 (26.5) | 176 (70.4) | |||
| Poe Karen | 66 (11.6) | 19 (11.7) | 24 (15.5) | 23 (9.2) | |||
| Burman Muslim | 44 (7.8) | 0 (0) | 1 (0.7) | 43 (17.2) | |||
| Other | 19 (3.4) | 6 (3.7) | 7 (4.5) | 6 (2.4) | |||
|
| |||||||
| Buddhist | 408 (71.8) | 0 | 152 (93.2) | 147 (94.8) | 0.40 | 109 (43.6) | |
| Christian | 115 (20.3) | 11 (6.8) | 7 (4.5) | 97 (38.8) | |||
| Muslim | 45 (7.9) | 0 (0) | 1 (0.7) | 44 (17.6) |
| ||
|
| |||||||
| Married/cohabiting | 566 (99.6) | 0 | 163 (100.0) | 154 (99.3) | 0.49 | 249 (99.6) | 1.00 |
| Education and language | |||||||
| Years of education, med (range) | 4 (0–18) | 78 | 3 (0–12) | 4 (0–15) | 0.42 | 5 (0–18) | 0.02 |
|
| |||||||
| Under 3 years, n (%) | 255 (45.4) | 6 | 100 (61.7) | 60 (39.0) |
| 95 (38.6) |
|
| 3 to 6 years, n (%) | 164 (29.2) | 35 (21.6) | 61 (39.6) | 68 (27.6) | |||
| 7 to 10 years, n (%) | 119 (21.2) | 26 (16.1) | 23 (14.9) | 70 (28.5) | |||
| Over 10 years, n (%) | 24 (4.3) | 1 (0.6) | 10 (6.5) | 13 (5.3) | |||
|
| |||||||
| Myanmar school | 245 (53.4) | 116 | 66 (53.2) | 89 (76.7) |
| 90 (41.1) |
|
| Thai school | 9 (2.0) | 7 (5.7) | 0 (0) | 2 (0.9) | |||
| NGO/faith-based school | 89 (19.4) | 9 (7.3) | 3 (2.6) | 77 (35.2) | |||
| None | 116 (25.3) | 42 (33.9) | 24 (20.7) | 50 (22.8) | |||
| Literate (self-report), n (%) | 392 (69.0) | 0 | 98 (60.1) | 106 (68.4) | 0.13 | 188 (75.2) |
|
|
| |||||||
| Burmese | 239 (42.1) | 0 | 91 (55.8) | 97 (62.6) | 0.05 | 51 (20.4) | <0.01 |
| Sgaw Karen | 280 (49.3) | 64 (39.3) | 42 (27.1) | 174 (69.6) | |||
| Poe Karen | 43 (7.6) | 7 (4.3) | 13 (8.4) | 23 (9.2) | |||
| Other | 6 (1.1) | 1 (0.6) | 3 (1.9) | 2 (0.8) | |||
|
| |||||||
| One language | 211 (46.2) | 82 | 53 (42.7) | 58 (50.4) | 0.48 | 100 (45.9) | 0.99 |
| Two to three languages | 192 (42.0) | 56 (45.2) | 44 (38.3) | 92 (42.2) | |||
| Four or more languages | 54 (11.8) | 15 (12.1) | 13 (11.3) | 26 (11.9) | |||
| Economic | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| Agriculture | 212 (39.2) | 2 | 119 (73.9) | 76 (56.3) |
| 17 (6.9) |
|
| NGO | 59 (10.9) | 2 (1.2) | 5 (3.7) | 52 (21.2) | |||
| Selling | 50 (9.2) | 12 (7.5) | 17 (12.6) | 21 (8.6) | |||
| Other | 27 (5.0) | 3 (1.9) | 6 (4.4) | 18 (7.4) | |||
| Housework | 193 (35.7) | 25 (15.5) | 31 (23.0) | 137 (55.9) | |||
| Household size, med (range) | 4 (1–14) | 4 | 3 (1–14) | 4 (2–12) | 0.51 | 5 (1–13) |
|
| Telephone ownership, n (%) | 329 (57.9) | 0 | 87 (53.4) | 71 (45.8) | 0.18 | 171 (68.4) |
|
| Lifestyle | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| Alcohol | 25 (4.4) | 0 | 1 (0.6) | 18 (11.6) |
| 6 (2.4) |
|
| Smoking | 56 (9.9) | 0 | 17 (10.4) | 10 (6.5) | 0.20 | 29 (11.6) | 0.22 |
| Chewing tobacco | 27 (4.8) | 0 | 23 (14.1) | 0 (0) |
| 4 (1.6) |
|
| Chewing betel | 251 (44.2) | 0 | 53 (32.5) | 66 (42.6) | 0.06 | 132 (52.8) |
|
| Obstetric | |||||||
| Parity, med (range) | 1 (0–8) | 113 | 1 (0–5) | 1 (0–8) | 0.43 | 1 (0–7) |
|
| Planned pregnancy, n (%) | 310 (68.3) | 114 | 85 (68.0) | 71 (64.0) | 0.51 | 154 (70.6) | 0.30 |
| Psychosocial | |||||||
| History of depression, n (%) | 147 (26.0) | 2 | 2 (1.23) | 25 (16.3) |
| 120 (48.0) |
|
| Migration | |||||||
|
| |||||||
| Myanmar | 113 (24.5) | 108 | 36 (28.8) | 74 (63.2) |
| 3 (1.4) |
|
| Thailand | 348 (75.5) | 89 (71.2) | 43 (36.8) | 216 (98.6) | |||
|
| |||||||
| Median (range) | 9 (1–39) | 272 | 3 (1–33) | 10 (1–39) |
| 10 (1–30) |
|
| ≤1 year, n (%) | 64 (31.7) | 36 (42.4) | 19 (29.7) | 0.11 | 9 (17.0) |
| |
| ≤5 years, n (%) | 158 (53.4) | 74 (60.2) | 41 (47.7) | 0.07 | 43 (49.4) | 0.38 | |
*P values calculated using two-group t-tests for continuous data, χ2 tests for categorical data and Fisher’s exact test for categorical data with cell counts<5.
MKT, Mawker Tai; MLA, Maela camp; NGO, non-governmental organisation; WPA, Wang Pha.
First trimester depression status among study participants by site and by migrant status
| All | Labour migrant sites | Refugee camp | ||||
| MKT | WPA | p Value | MLA | p Value | ||
| Any depression | 146 (25.8) | 29 (17.9) | 46 (29.7) | 0.01 | 71 (28.4) | 0.03 |
MKT, Mawker Tai; MLA, Maela camp; NOS, Not Otherwise Specified; WPA, Wang Pha.