孤独、压力过大的妈妈:后工业时代的社会经历会使妇女面临围产期情绪失调的风险吗?

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Pub Date : 2024-10-04 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1093/emph/eoae025
Elena Bridgers, Molly M Fox
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引用次数: 0

摘要

据估计,在农业社会和后工业社会中,多达 17.7% 的母亲患有围产期情绪和焦虑症(PMADs)。各种研究结果表明,围产期情绪和焦虑障碍可能是 "现代性疾病",是人类几十万年来进化的环境与当代后工业化生活方式不匹配造成的。在此,我们通过关注与 PMADs 相关的三个不匹配来源,强调了育儿的社会背景:更近的生育间隔、缺乏异母支持和缺乏先前的育儿经验。向农业和工业化的过渡破坏了传统的母性支持网络,使得生育间隔更近而不影响婴儿的存活,但却增加了母性的孤独感。照顾生育间隔较近的后代会带来很大的育儿压力,在社会孤立的情况下,这尤其是一项挑战。在所有当代狩猎-采集社会中,母亲的亲属和社区在全母性抚养(参与育儿)中发挥着至关重要的作用,促进了同时照顾不同年龄、具有独特年龄需求的儿童的系统。在后工业社会中,由于缺乏来自全职母亲的社会支持和帮助,母亲们的护理负担加重,从而增加了罹患 PMAD 的风险。此外,人类进化史上典型的传统异母抚养体系为女孩和妇女提供了做母亲前的经验和培训,这很可能会提高她们的自我效能感。我们认为,典型的后工业时代母亲的社会经验是一种进化异常,导致了更高的 PMADs 发生率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lonely, stressed-out moms: Does the postindustrial social experience put women at risk for perinatal mood disorders?

Perinatal mood and anxiety disorders (PMADs) are estimated to affect as many as 17.7% of mothers in agricultural and postindustrial societies. Various lines of research converge to suggest that PMADs may be 'diseases of modernity', arising from a mismatch between the environments in which humans evolved over hundreds of thousands of years and contemporary postindustrial lifestyles. Here we highlight the social context of childrearing by focusing on three sources of mismatch associated with PMADs: closer interbirth spacing, lack of allomaternal support and lack of prior childcare experience. The transitions to agriculture and industrialization disrupted traditional maternal support networks, allowing closer birth spacing without compromising infant survival but increasing maternal isolation. Caring for closely spaced offspring is associated with high levels of parenting stress, and poses a particular challenge in the context of social isolation. The mother's kin and community play a critical role in allomothering (childcare participation) in all contemporary hunter-gatherer societies, facilitating a system of simultaneous care for children of a range of ages with unique age-specific needs. The absence of social support and assistance from allomothers in postindustrial societies leaves mothers at increased risk for PMADs due to elevated caregiving burdens. Furthermore, the traditional system of allomothering that typified human evolutionary history afforded girls and women experience and training before motherhood, which likely increased their self-efficacy. We argue that the typical postindustrial motherhood social experience is an evolutionary anomaly, leading to higher rates of PMADs.

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来源期刊
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Environmental Science-Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
2.70%
发文量
37
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: About the Journal Founded by Stephen Stearns in 2013, Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health is an open access journal that publishes original, rigorous applications of evolutionary science to issues in medicine and public health. It aims to connect evolutionary biology with the health sciences to produce insights that may reduce suffering and save lives. Because evolutionary biology is a basic science that reaches across many disciplines, this journal is open to contributions on a broad range of topics.
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