Publication:
Common model of stress, anxiety, and depressive symptoms in pregnant women from seven high-income Western countries at the COVID-19 pandemic onset.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2022-10-28

Authors

Lobel, Marci
Preis, Heidi
Mahaffey, Brittain
Schaal, Nora K
Yirmiya, Karen
Atzil, Shir
Reuveni, Inbal
Balestrieri, Matteo
Penengo, Chiara
Colli, Chiara

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier Ltd
Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Increases in stress, anxiety, and depression among women pregnant during the COVID-19 pandemic have been reported internationally. Yet rigorous comparison of the prevalence of maternal mental health problems across countries is lacking. Moreover, whether stress is a common predictor of maternal mental health during the pandemic across countries is unknown. 8148 pregnant women from Germany, Israel, Italy, Poland, Spain, Switzerland, and the United States were enrolled in the International COVID-19 Pregnancy Experiences (I-COPE) Study between April 17 and May 31, 2020. Sociodemographic characteristics, pandemic-related stress, pregnancy-specific stress, anxiety, and depression were assessed with well-validated instruments. The magnitude of stress and mood disturbances was compared across countries. A path model predicting clinically significant levels of anxiety and depression from maternal characteristics and stress was tested for all study participants and then examined separately in each country with >200 participants. Countries differed significantly in magnitude of pandemic-related pregnancy stress and pandemic-unrelated pregnancy-specific stress, and in prevalence of clinically significant anxiety and depression levels. A well-fitting common path model for the entire sample indicated that mood and anxiety disturbances were strongly predicted by pandemic-related and pregnancy-specific stress after accounting for maternal characteristics. The model was replicated in individual countries. Although pregnant women in high-income Western countries experienced different levels of stress resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, stress is a strong, common predictor of anxiety and depressive symptoms in these individuals. The common model can be used to inform research and clinical interventions to protect against adverse consequences of prenatal maternal stress, anxiety, and depression for mothers and infants.

Description

MeSH Terms

Pregnancy
Infant
Female
Humans
Pregnant Women
COVID-19
Pandemics
Depression
Anxiety
Mothers

DeCS Terms

Ansiedad
Depresión
Embarazo
Femenino
Humanos
Lactante
Madres
Mujeres embarazadas
Pandemias

CIE Terms

Keywords

Anxiety, COVID-19 global pandemic, Depression, Maternal stress, Pregnancy, Women's health

Citation

Lobel M, Preis H, Mahaffey B, Schaal NK, Yirmiya K, Atzil S, et al. Common model of stress, anxiety, and depressive symptoms in pregnant women from seven high-income Western countries at the COVID-19 pandemic onset. Soc Sci Med. 2022 Dec;315:115499.