The association between maternal fears about their infant/toddler during the COVID-19 pandemic and depression and anxiety: a birth cohort study
Braz. J. Psychiatry (São Paulo, 1999, Impr.)
; Braz. J. Psychiatry (São Paulo, 1999, Impr.);45(6): 491-497, Nov.-Dec. 2023. tab, graf
Article
em En
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LILACS-Express
| LILACS
| ID: biblio-1534001
Biblioteca responsável:
BR1.1
ABSTRACT
Objective:
To assess the association between maternal fears about their infant/toddler and depression and anxiety during the COVID-19 pandemic.Methods:
In 2019, all mothers who gave birth in hospitals in Rio Grande, RS, Brazil were asked to respond to a standardized questionnaire (baseline). We followed them between May-June 2020 (first follow-up point), August-December 2020 (second follow-up point), and from October 2021 to March 2022 (third follow-up point), and asked them if they were (1) afraid that their infant/toddler would become infected with COVID or get sick (yes/no), (2) afraid that they would contaminate their own child with COVID, and/or (3) worried about the pandemic's effects on their child's future. At baseline and at all follow-up points, we assessed depressive symptoms using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale and anxiety symptoms using the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale, creating symptom trajectories using group-based trajectory modelling. We used multinomial logistic regression to calculate adjusted relative risk ratios (RRR).Results:
A total of 1,296 mothers participated. Worrying about the pandemic's effects on their child's future and the fear of contaminating their own child with COVID-19 increased the risk of raising depressive symptoms to a clinical level (RRR = 4.97, 95%CI 2.32-10.64 and RRR = 3.87, 95%CI 1.58-9.47, respectively) and anxiety to a moderate level (RRR = 2.91, 95%CI 1.69-5.01 and RRR = 1.86, 95%CI 1.03-3.35, respectively).Conclusion:
Fear for their children increased maternal depressive and anxiety symptoms during the pandemic.
Texto completo:
1
Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
LILACS
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Braz. J. Psychiatry (São Paulo, 1999, Impr.)
Ano de publicação:
2023
Tipo de documento:
Article
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Project document