妊娠丧子后的抑郁:有无在世子女、丧子类型、多重丧子、关系质量和应对策略的作用。

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY European Journal of Psychotraumatology Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-14 DOI:10.1080/20008066.2024.2386827
Stefanie Rita Balle, Christine Nothelfer, Roland Mergl, Sarah Miriam Quaatz, Svenja Hoffmann, Helena Hoffmann, Antje-Kathrin Allgaier, Kathryn Eichhorn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:妊娠损失(PL)是一个常见的公共健康问题,但很少有人对其进行研究,因为妊娠损失会增加心理健康受损的风险,尤其是抑郁症:目的:以往的研究表明,无子女是妊娠损失后抑郁的一个相关因素。首次研究还表明,失去妊娠的类型、多次失去妊娠、人际关系质量和应对策略与失去妊娠后的抑郁有关。然而,研究结果并不一致,现有的少数研究也存在方法上的缺陷。因此,我们预计无存活子女的女性抑郁得分较高,并探索性地研究了失去妊娠的女性的损失类型、损失次数、关系质量和应对策略与抑郁得分之间的关系:在网络环境中,N = 172 名在过去 12 个月中流产(n = 137)或死产(n = 35)的女性填写了患者健康问卷(PHQ-D)、Brief-COPE 和德国关系质量问卷 Partnerschaftsfragebogen(PFB):在多重分层回归分析中,死产(β = 0.15,p = .035)、有无在世子女(β = -0.17,p = .022)和自责/情感回避(β = 0.34,p 结论是:死产、有无在世子女、自责/情感回避和自责/情感回避对妇女的影响最大:特别是对于没有存活子女、死产或受自责/情感逃避影响的妇女,医疗服务提供者应监测其是否存在抑郁症状。我们的研究结果表明,有必要使用特定的工具来测量 PL 后的应对方式和人际关系质量,因为 PFB 和 Brief-COPE 的标准项目似乎不适合这种情况。
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Depression after pregnancy loss: the role of the presence of living children, the type of loss, multiple losses, the relationship quality, and coping strategies.

Background: Pregnancy loss (PL) is a common, yet rarely examined public health issue associated with an increased risk of impaired mental health, particularly depression.Objective: Previous research shows childlessness to be a correlate of depression after PL. First studies also indicate associations of the type of loss, multiple losses, relationship quality, and coping strategies with depression after the loss of a pregnancy. However, results are inconsistent and the few existing studies show methodological deficits. Therefore, we expect higher depression scores for women without living children, and we exploratively examine the associations between the type of loss, the number of losses, relationship quality, and coping strategies with depression scores for women who suffered a PL.Method: In an online setting, N = 172 women with miscarriage (n = 137) or stillbirth (n = 35) throughout the last 12 months completed the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-D), Brief-COPE, and Partnerschaftsfragebogen (PFB), a German questionnaire measuring relationship quality.Results: In a multiple hierarchical regression analysis, stillbirth, β = 0.15, p = .035, presence of living children, β = -0.17, p = .022, and self-blame/emotional avoidance, β = 0.34, p < .001, are predictors of depression scores. However, there was no association between depression symptoms and other coping strategies, relationship quality, and multiple losses.Conclusions: Especially with regard to women who have no living children, have suffered a stillbirth, or are affected by self-blame/emotional avoidance, health care providers should monitor the presence of depressive symptoms. Our results indicate the need for specific instruments measuring coping style and relationship quality after PL, since the standard items of the PFB and the Brief-COPE seem inappropriate for this setting.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
12.00%
发文量
153
审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Psychotraumatology (EJPT) is a peer-reviewed open access interdisciplinary journal owned by the European Society of Traumatic Stress Studies (ESTSS). The European Journal of Psychotraumatology (EJPT) aims to engage scholars, clinicians and researchers in the vital issues of how to understand, prevent and treat the consequences of stress and trauma, including but not limited to, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depressive disorders, substance abuse, burnout, and neurobiological or physical consequences, using the latest research or clinical experience in these areas. The journal shares ESTSS’ mission to advance and disseminate scientific knowledge about traumatic stress. Papers may address individual events, repeated or chronic (complex) trauma, large scale disasters, or violence. Being open access, the European Journal of Psychotraumatology is also evidence of ESTSS’ stand on free accessibility of research publications to a wider community via the web. The European Journal of Psychotraumatology seeks to attract contributions from academics and practitioners from diverse professional backgrounds, including, but not restricted to, those in mental health, social sciences, and health and welfare services. Contributions from outside Europe are welcome. The journal welcomes original basic and clinical research articles that consolidate and expand the theoretical and professional basis of the field of traumatic stress; Review articles including meta-analyses; short communications presenting new ideas or early-stage promising research; study protocols that describe proposed or ongoing research; case reports examining a single individual or event in a real‑life context; clinical practice papers sharing experience from the clinic; letters to the Editor debating articles already published in the Journal; inaugural Lectures; conference abstracts and book reviews. Both quantitative and qualitative research is welcome.
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