Race as a determinant of prenatal depressive symptoms: analysis of data from the 'All Our Families' study.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 ETHNIC STUDIES
Ethnicity & Health Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-09 DOI:10.1080/13557858.2024.2312420
Amrita Roy, Scott Patten, Wilfreda Thurston, Tanya Beran, Lynden Lindsay Crowshoe, Suzanne Tough
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: Prenatal depression is a serious maternal-child health concern. Risk factors and health consequences appear more prevalent in Indigenous communities and ethnic minority groups; however, research on these populations is limited. We examined the following questions: (A) How do pregnant Indigenous women, ethnic minority women, and White women compare on levels of depressive symptoms and possible clinical depression, and on major risk and protective factors? (B) Is non-dominant (non-White) race associated with higher depressive symptoms and possible clinical depression? (C) What factors mediate and moderate the relationship between race and depression?

Design: Data were from the All Our Families study (n = 3354 pregnant women from Alberta, Canada). Depressive symptoms were measured with the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS). Descriptive statistics and multivariable regression methods were used to assess the hypotheses that Indigenous and ethnic minority women would have significantly higher mean EPDS score estimates and higher proportions scoring above cut-offs for possible clinical depression, relative to White women. The association between race and depressive symptoms was hypothesised to be partially mediated by risk factors of socioeconomics, health background, discrimination, domestic violence, and psychosocial stress. Potential confounders were age, marital status, and parity. Diet and social support were hypothesised as protective buffers between stress and depressive symptoms.

Results: A higher proportion of White women were married, had family income over $80,000, were employed, and had adequate social support, relative to other women. They had significantly lower mean depressive symptom score, and a smaller proportion scored above cut-offs for possible clinical depression. The positive association between race and depressive symptoms appeared to be partially mediated by socioeconomic factors and psychosocial stress. Social support appeared to moderate the association between stress and depressive symptoms.

Conclusions: Strategies to address socioeconomic status, stress, and social support among racialized minority women may reduce the risk for prenatal depression.

种族是产前抑郁症状的决定因素:"我们所有的家庭 "研究数据分析。
目的:产前抑郁症是一个严重的母婴健康问题。风险因素和健康后果似乎在土著社区和少数民族群体中更为普遍;然而,针对这些人群的研究却很有限。我们研究了以下问题:(A)土著孕妇、少数民族孕妇和白人孕妇在抑郁症状和可能的临床抑郁水平以及主要风险和保护因素方面的比较如何?(B) 非主要(非白人)种族是否与较高的抑郁症状和可能的临床抑郁有关?(C) 哪些因素可以调节和缓和种族与抑郁症之间的关系?数据来自 "我们所有的家庭 "研究(n = 3354 名来自加拿大艾伯塔省的孕妇)。抑郁症状采用爱丁堡产后抑郁量表(EPDS)进行测量。研究采用了描述性统计和多变量回归方法来评估以下假设:与白人妇女相比,土著妇女和少数民族妇女的 EPDS 平均得分估计值明显更高,得分超过可能患有临床抑郁症的临界值的比例也更高。假设种族与抑郁症状之间的关系部分受社会经济、健康背景、歧视、家庭暴力和社会心理压力等风险因素的影响。潜在的混杂因素包括年龄、婚姻状况和胎次。饮食和社会支持被认为是压力和抑郁症状之间的保护性缓冲因素:与其他妇女相比,白人妇女中已婚、家庭收入超过 80,000 美元、有工作并获得充分社会支持的比例较高。她们的抑郁症状平均得分明显较低,而得分超过可能患有临床抑郁症的临界值的比例较小。种族与抑郁症状之间的正相关似乎部分受到社会经济因素和社会心理压力的影响。社会支持似乎缓和了压力与抑郁症状之间的关联:针对少数种族妇女的社会经济地位、压力和社会支持的策略可降低产前抑郁的风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Ethnicity & Health
Ethnicity & Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
42
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ethnicity & Health is an international academic journal designed to meet the world-wide interest in the health of ethnic groups. It embraces original papers from the full range of disciplines concerned with investigating the relationship between ’ethnicity’ and ’health’ (including medicine and nursing, public health, epidemiology, social sciences, population sciences, and statistics). The journal also covers issues of culture, religion, gender, class, migration, lifestyle and racism, in so far as they relate to health and its anthropological and social aspects.
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