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Title: Longitudinal study of perinatal maternal stress, depressive symptoms and anxiety. Author: Liou SR, Wang P, Cheng CY. Journal: Midwifery; 2014 Jun; 30(6):795-801. PubMed ID: 24342423. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: to understand the trends in, and relationships between, maternal stress, depressive symptoms and anxiety in pregnancy and post partum. DESIGN: a prospective longitudinal survey study was undertaken to explore maternal psychological distress throughout the perinatal period. The participants were recruited after 24 completed weeks of gestation, and were followed-up monthly until one month post partum (four surveys in total). SETTING: participants were recruited from a single hospital in southern Taiwan, and asked to complete questionnaires in the hospital waiting area. PARTICIPANTS: inclusion criteria were: age ≥18 years, able to read and write Chinese, ≥24 weeks of gestation, singleton pregnancy and no pregnancy complications (including a diagnosis of antenatal depression or anxiety disorder). In total, 197 women completed all four surveys (response rate 74.62%). MEASUREMENTS AND FINDINGS: stress was measured with the 10-item Perceived Stress Scale, depressive symptoms were measured with the Center for Epidemiologic Studies' Depression scale, and anxiety was measured with the Zung Self-reported Anxiety Scale. Participants were followed-up at four time points: T1 (25-29 gestational weeks), T2 (30-34 gestational weeks), T3 (>34 gestational weeks) and T4 (4-6 weeks post partum). Appointments for data collection were made in accordance with the participants' antenatal and postnatal check-ups. The three types of maternal distress had different courses of change throughout the perinatal period, as levels of depressive symptoms remained unchanged, anxiety levels increased as gestation advanced but declined after birth, and stress decreased gradually during pregnancy but returned to the T1 level after birth. There was a low to high degree of correlation in maternal stress, depressive symptoms and anxiety in pregnancy and post partum. KEY CONCLUSIONS: around one-quarter of the study participants had depressive symptoms during pregnancy and post partum. Stress and anxiety showed opposing courses during the perinatal period. Regardless of the trend, maternal mental distress returned to the T1 level after birth. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: effective survey questionnaires are suggested for use as primary screening for possible psychological distress among pregnant and post partum women. It is suggested that health care professionals involved in obstetrics and midwifery should pay attention to the psychological needs of pre- and postnatal women, provide women with sufficient information about their mental well-being, and make appropriate and timely referrals to psychiatric or psychological care.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]