父母的预测因素对产后抑郁症的影响。

IF 2 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING Western Journal of Nursing Research Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-01 DOI:10.1177/01939459241254774
Shefaly Shorey, Thilagamangai, Jancy Mathews, Siew Hoon Lim, Luming Shi, Jing Shi Chua, Ruochen Du, Yiong Huak Chan, Thiam Chye Tan, Cornelia Chee, Yap Seng Chong
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:产后抑郁症(PPD)发病率很高,困扰着相当一部分父母。产后抑郁症还会对婴儿发育和亲子关系造成各种负面影响。社会支持被认为是影响许多父母预测因素的重要因素,并可能影响 PPD 的发展:本研究旨在探讨感知到的社会支持如何通过影响产后焦虑、父母满意度和父母自我效能感(PSE)间接影响产后 6 个月父母的 PPD 症状:方法:对一项随机对照试验的数据进行二次分析,采用横断面探索性设计。共纳入了 400 名新加坡父母(200 对夫妇),并使用结构方程模型分析了 PPD 与潜在预测因素之间的关系:研究结果表明,假设模型与收集到的数据之间的拟合程度较低。研究发现,社会支持是产后焦虑、PSE 和父母满意度的重要预测因素。产后焦虑是产后抑郁症的重要预测因素,但 PSE 和父母满意度则不是:本研究概述了亚裔父母的不同预测因素与 PPD 的关系。产后焦虑可明显预测 PPD,但社会支持对产后焦虑、养育满意度和 PSE 有负面影响。研究结果进一步揭示了如何识别有 PPD 风险的父母,并证明了社会支持可能会对父母的结果产生负面影响。需要对亚洲父母进行更多的定性研究,以进一步解释这些发现,并为未来干预措施的开发提供信息。
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Effects of Parental Predictors on Postpartum Depression.

Background: Postpartum depression (PPD) is highly prevalent and plagues a significant proportion of parents. Postpartum depression also exerts various negative consequences on infant development and parent-infant relationships. Social support is identified as an important factor influencing many parental predictors, and may affect the development of PPD.

Objective: This study aimed to investigate how perceived social support can indirectly influence PPD symptoms in parents at 6 months postpartum by influencing postpartum anxiety, parental satisfaction, and parental self-efficacy (PSE).

Methods: A secondary analysis of data from a randomized controlled trial was used with a cross-sectional exploratory design. A total of 400 Singaporean parents (200 couples) were included, and structural equation modeling was used to analyze the relationships between PPD and potential predictors.

Results: Findings revealed a less adequate fit between the hypothesized model and the data collected. Social support was found to be a significant predictor of postpartum anxiety, PSE, and parental satisfaction. Postpartum anxiety was a significant predictor of PPD, but PSE and parental satisfaction were not.

Conclusion: This study provides an overview of how different parental predictors may be associated with PPD among Asian parents. Postpartum anxiety significantly predicted PPD, but social support had negative effects on postpartum anxiety, parenting satisfaction, and PSE. The findings provide further insight into how parents at risk of PPD can be identified and demonstrated how social support might negatively impact parental outcomes. More qualitative research with Asian parents is needed to further explain these findings and inform the development of future interventions.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
48
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Western Journal of Nursing Research (WJNR) is a widely read and respected peer-reviewed journal published twelve times a year providing an innovative forum for nurse researchers, students, and clinical practitioners to participate in ongoing scholarly dialogue. WJNR publishes research reports, systematic reviews, methodology papers, and invited special papers. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
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