Gabriella E Hamlett, Shaan F McGhie, Gabriella Dishy, Sabrina J Chan, Richard J McNally, Sharon Dekel
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: Women with a history of sexual trauma (ST) have heightened risk for postpartum psychopathology. Although ST increases risk for traumatic delivery and maternal psychopathology, knowledge of the functional connections among various psychiatric symptoms and complicated delivery remains limited.
Methods: We used regularized partial correlation networks to examine connections between symptoms of childbirth-related PTSD (CB-PTSD), depression, anxiety, somatization, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and complicated delivery (e.g., presence of obstetric complications, preterm birth, advanced maternal age) in 1,916 postpartum women. We compared networks of women with and without a history of sexual trauma (nST = 958 and nNST = 958, respectively).
Results: Complicated delivery in both groups connected with three CB-PTSD clusters: reexperiencing, avoidance, and negative alterations in cognition and mood. Network comparison tests revealed a significant difference in global strength invariance, but not network invariance. ST network CB-PTSD nodes were significantly more strongly interconnected as compared to those with no ST (NST). Conversely, stronger connections in the NST network were Mood with Anxiety and Avoidance with Somatic symptoms.
Conclusion: The ST group's stronger PTSD symptom coactivation may reflect differences in risk for the emergence of CB-PTSD for women with a history of ST.
期刊介绍:
Archives of Women’s Mental Health is the official journal of the International Association for Women''s Mental Health, Marcé Society and the North American Society for Psychosocial Obstetrics and Gynecology (NASPOG). The exchange of knowledge between psychiatrists and obstetrician-gynecologists is one of the major aims of the journal. Its international scope includes psychodynamics, social and biological aspects of all psychiatric and psychosomatic disorders in women. The editors especially welcome interdisciplinary studies, focussing on the interface between psychiatry, psychosomatics, obstetrics and gynecology. Archives of Women’s Mental Health publishes rigorously reviewed research papers, short communications, case reports, review articles, invited editorials, historical perspectives, book reviews, letters to the editor, as well as conference abstracts. Only contributions written in English will be accepted. The journal assists clinicians, teachers and researchers to incorporate knowledge of all aspects of women’s mental health into current and future clinical care and research.