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Title: Mindfulness skills during pregnancy: Prospective associations with mother's mood and neonatal birth weight. Author: Nyklíček I, Truijens SEM, Spek V, Pop VJM. Journal: J Psychosom Res; 2018 Apr; 107():14-19. PubMed ID: 29502758. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Mindfulness skills have been associated with better mood and several health related outcomes. Because depressed mood during pregnancy has been related to worse child outcomes, the aim was to examine the association of mindfulness skills during pregnancy with the mother's depressive symptoms, gestational age, and neonatal birth weight. METHODS: A subsample of 905 pregnant women who participated in the longitudinal cohort HAPPY study (Holistic Approach to Pregnancy and the first Postpartum Year) completed the 12-item Three Facet Mindfulness-Questionnaire-Short Form at 22weeks of gestation. The Edinburgh Depression Scale was completed to assess depressive symptoms at 12, 22 and 32weeks. The obstetric medical records were examined for gestational age and birth weight. RESULTS: Mindfulness skills Acting with Awareness and Nonjudging at 22weeks were associated with less depressive symptoms at 22weeks and at 32weeks. When controlled for depressive symptoms at 22weeks, the association was still significant for Nonjudging predicting depressive symptoms at 32weeks (Beta=-0.12, p<0.01). Regarding the obstetric medical records, only Nonreacting was (positively) associated with birth weight (Beta=0.09, p<0.01). Controlling for gestational age, sex, parity, depressive symptoms, and health behavior, Nonreacting predicted a normal birth weight (OR=1.12, 95% CI=1.06-1.19), in contrast to low birth weight. CONCLUSION: It seems that different mindfulness skills during pregnancy are important in predicting mother's depressive symptoms compared to the prediction of child's birth weight. Potential mechanisms are discussed.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]