[Association between financial anxiety and subjective health and physical fatigue perceptions among mothers of 18-month-old infants].

Yasue Ogata, Yoshie Yokoyama
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Abstract

Objective Poverty is a factor that affects children's health through its role in parental depression and stress. While the association between financial status and depression or quality of life scores of mothers has been previously reported in Japan, no study has focused on mothers' subjective health and physical fatigue perceptions. This study aimed to examine the relationship between mothers' financial anxiety and subjective health and physical fatigue perceptions.Methods We conducted a survey in parents attending routine health checkups for their 18-month-old infant in a single area of City A between November 2017 and October 2019. After excluding those for whom the required analysis data were missing, we analyzed data from 779 parents who responded to the survey and consented to the use of their children's health checkup data. The response variables were maternal subjective health and physical fatigue perceptions, and the explanatory variables were the presence of financial anxiety in mothers at their child's 3- or 18-month health checkups and financial anxiety situation in both periods. Financial anxiety was classified into four groups according to status at the 3- and 18-month time points. The independence of the qualitative variables among these four groups was verified using Fisher's exact test, and the relationship between financial anxiety and maternal subjective health and physical fatigue perceptions was evaluated using logistic regression analysis.Results Financial anxiety was present in 54 mothers (6.9%) and 46 mothers (5.9%) at the 3- and 18-month checkup, respectively. Analysis of financial anxiety in both periods showed that 695 mothers (89.2%) had no financial anxiety at either time point, 30 (3.9%) had financial anxiety only at the 18-month checkup, 38 (4.9%) had financial anxiety only at the 3-month checkup, and 16 (2.1%) had financial anxiety at both time points. At the 18-month checkup, the odds ratios of poor subjective health and severe physical fatigue perceptions were 3.85 (95% confidence interval [CI]; 1.34-11.05) and 6.58 (95% CI; 2.18-19.85), respectively, among the mothers who had financial anxiety at both time points compared to those who had no financial anxiety at either time point.Conclusion Financial anxiety may affect mothers' health. Therefore, mothers should be provided with solution-oriented support geared toward mitigating financial anxiety, in coordination with affiliated organizations, if financial anxiety is detected.

[经济焦虑与 18 个月婴儿母亲的主观健康和身体疲劳感之间的关系]。
客观贫穷是影响儿童健康的一个因素,因为贫穷会导致父母抑郁和压力过大。虽然日本以前曾报道过经济状况与母亲抑郁或生活质量得分之间的关系,但没有研究关注母亲的主观健康和身体疲劳感。本研究旨在探讨母亲的财务焦虑与主观健康和身体疲劳感之间的关系。方法 我们在 2017 年 11 月至 2019 年 10 月期间对 A 市某地区为 18 个月大婴儿进行常规健康检查的父母进行了调查。在排除了缺少所需分析数据的父母后,我们分析了 779 名回复调查并同意使用其子女健康检查数据的父母的数据。回答变量为母亲的主观健康和身体疲劳感,解释变量为母亲在孩子 3 个月或 18 个月健康体检时是否存在经济焦虑以及这两个时期的经济焦虑情况。根据 3 个月和 18 个月时点的状况,经济焦虑被分为四组。结果 在 3 个月和 18 个月体检时,分别有 54 名母亲(6.9%)和 46 名母亲(5.9%)存在经济焦虑。对两个时期的经济焦虑分析表明,695 名母亲(89.2%)在任何一个时间点都没有经济焦虑,30 名母亲(3.9%)仅在 18 个月检查时有经济焦虑,38 名母亲(4.9%)仅在 3 个月检查时有经济焦虑,16 名母亲(2.1%)在两个时间点都有经济焦虑。在 18 个月的体检中,与在两个时间点均无财务焦虑的母亲相比,在两个时间点均有财务焦虑的母亲的主观健康状况差和严重身体疲劳感的几率比分别为 3.85(95% 置信区间 [CI];1.34-11.05)和 6.58(95% CI;2.18-19.85)。因此,如果发现母亲有经济焦虑,应与相关机构协调,为她们提供以解决问题为导向的支持,以减轻她们的经济焦虑。
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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