Motherhood as a vulnerability factor in major depression: the role of negative pregnancy experiences

Bernazzani, Odette and Bifulco, Antonia ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8316-9706 (2003) Motherhood as a vulnerability factor in major depression: the role of negative pregnancy experiences. Social Science & Medicine, 56 (6) . pp. 1249-1260. ISSN 0277-9536 [Article] (doi:10.1016/S0277-9536(02)00123-5)

Abstract

Adverse pregnancy experiences were examined retrospectively in relation to adult lifetime experience of clinical depression to see whether such experience conferred long-term risk for women. The sample consisted of just under 200 community-based women, half of whom were selected for high depressive-risk on the basis of adverse childhood experience. Over two-thirds of these women had experienced pregnancy. Adverse pregnancies were classified either in terms of loss (adverse non-live pregnancy/births) or in terms of live births in difficult circumstances (adverse live pregnancy/births). Intensive life history interviews collected details of all pregnancies, childhood neglect/abuse, marital adversity and a history of episodes of clinical depression.

Both adverse non-live and live pregnancy experiences were significantly related to lifetime depression. The relationship remained for depression in different time periods and for those episodes unrelated to maternity experience. Both types of adverse pregnancy/birth experiences were associated with increased rates of marital problems. While adverse live pregnancy/births related to prior childhood neglect/abuse, this did not hold for those non-live. Logistic regression showed that only adverse non-live pregnancy/births together with marital adversity and childhood neglect/abuse provided the best model for lifetime depression. The findings are discussed in terms of lifetime trajectories linking difficult environments, close relationships and issues of loss.

Item Type: Article
Keywords (uncontrolled): Pregnancy; Maternal health; Depression; Risk factors
Research Areas: A. > School of Science and Technology > Psychology > Centre for Abuse and Trauma Studies (CATS)
A. > School of Science and Technology > Psychology
Item ID: 12519
Useful Links:
Depositing User: Natasa Blagojevic-Stokic
Date Deposited: 17 Jan 2014 05:35
Last Modified: 09 Feb 2020 16:06
URI: https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/id/eprint/12519

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Statistics

Activity Overview
6 month trend
0Downloads
6 month trend
473Hits

Additional statistics are available via IRStats2.