Ciara S Venter, Diego I Barcala-Delgado, Maureen Perry-Jenkins
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Participants included 122 working-class Black and Latina women who were recruited during their third trimester of pregnancy from local community spaces in the Southern New England region of the United States. Results from path analyses revealed that family support and nurse support moderated the positive association between life events and postpartum depressive symptoms at 1-year postpartum, with more life events predicting higher levels of depressive symptoms under conditions of low support. Further, family support and perceived control were associated with fewer depressive symptoms at 1-year postpartum. This study underscores the importance of interpersonal factors, specifically support from family and nurses, in shaping mental health outcomes for Black and Latina mothers amid life stressors. Findings hold important implications for clinicians and health care practitioners that can inform perinatal interventions leveraging these resources for these minoritized groups. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在美国,大约15%的女性经历过产后抑郁症,但黑人和拉丁裔女性继续遭受不成比例的高比率。虽然文献表明,生活压力源的经历是产后抑郁症状的一个强有力的预测因素,但很少有研究调查了个人和环境资源,可以保护少数群体免受围产期不良心理健康结果的影响。本文调查了四种类型的保护因素(家庭支持、医生支持、护士支持和感知控制)是否调节了生活事件与产后抑郁症状之间的假设关系。参与者包括122名工人阶级的黑人和拉丁裔妇女,她们在怀孕的第三个月从美国新英格兰南部地区的当地社区招募。路径分析结果显示,家庭支持和护士支持调节了产后1年生活事件与产后抑郁症状之间的正相关关系,在低支持的情况下,更多的生活事件预示着更高水平的抑郁症状。此外,家庭支持和感知控制与产后1年抑郁症状的减少有关。这项研究强调了人际因素的重要性,特别是来自家庭和护士的支持,在塑造黑人和拉丁裔母亲在生活压力下的心理健康结果。研究结果对临床医生和卫生保健从业人员具有重要意义,可以为这些少数群体提供围产期干预措施,利用这些资源。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Life events and postpartum depressive symptoms among Black and Latina mothers: The role of protective factors.
Approximately, 15% of women in the United States experience postpartum depression, but Black and Latina women continue to suffer at disproportionately higher rates. While literature has shown that the experience of life stressors is a strong predictor of postpartum depressive symptoms, less research has examined personal and contextual resources that can protect minoritized groups from poor mental health outcomes during the perinatal period. The current article investigated whether four types of protective factors (family support, doctor support, nurse support, and perceived control) moderated the hypothesized relationship between life events and postpartum depressive symptoms. Participants included 122 working-class Black and Latina women who were recruited during their third trimester of pregnancy from local community spaces in the Southern New England region of the United States. Results from path analyses revealed that family support and nurse support moderated the positive association between life events and postpartum depressive symptoms at 1-year postpartum, with more life events predicting higher levels of depressive symptoms under conditions of low support. Further, family support and perceived control were associated with fewer depressive symptoms at 1-year postpartum. This study underscores the importance of interpersonal factors, specifically support from family and nurses, in shaping mental health outcomes for Black and Latina mothers amid life stressors. Findings hold important implications for clinicians and health care practitioners that can inform perinatal interventions leveraging these resources for these minoritized groups. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Orthopsychiatry publishes articles that clarify, challenge, or reshape the prevailing understanding of factors in the prevention and correction of injustice and in the sustainable development of a humane and just society.