Journal article
Continuity of midwifery carer moderates the effects of prenatal maternal stress on postnatal maternal wellbeing: the Queensland flood study
Archives of Women's Mental Health, Vol.21(2), pp.203-214
2018
Abstract
Poor postnatal mental health is a major public health issue, and risk factors include experiencing adverse life events during pregnancy. We assessed whether midwifery group practice, compared to standard hospital care, would protect women from the negative impact of a sudden-onset flood on postnatal depression and anxiety. Women either received midwifery group practice care in pregnancy, in which they were allocated a primary midwife who provided continuity of care, or they received standard hospital care provided by various on-call and rostered medical staff. Women were pregnant when a sudden-onset flood severely affected Queensland, Australia, in January 2011. Women completed questionnaires on their flood-related hardship (objective stress), emotional reactions (subjective stress), and cognitive appraisal of the impact of the flood. Self-report assessments of the women's depression and anxiety were obtained during pregnancy, at 6 weeks and 6 months postnatally. Controlling for all main effects, regression analyses at 6 weeks postpartum showed a significant interaction between maternity care type and objective flood-related hardship and subjective stress, such that depression scores increased with increasing objective and subjective stress with standard care, but not with midwifery group practice (continuity), indicating a buffering effect of continuity of midwifery carer. Similar results were found for anxiety scores at 6 weeks, but only with subjective stress. The benefits of midwifery continuity of carer in pregnancy extend beyond a more positive birth experience and better birthing and infant outcomes, to mitigating the effects of high levels of stress experienced by women in the context of a natural disaster on postnatal mental health.
Details
- Title
- Continuity of midwifery carer moderates the effects of prenatal maternal stress on postnatal maternal wellbeing: the Queensland flood study
- Authors
- S Kildea (Author) - Mater ResearchGabrielle Simcock (Author) - Mater ResearchA Liu (Author) - Douglas Mental Health University Institute, CanadaG Elgbeili (Author) - Douglas Mental Health University Institute, CanadaD P Laplante (Author) - Douglas Mental Health University Institute, CanadaA Kahler (Author) - University of QueenslandM P Austin (Author) - Sydney UniversityS Tracy (Author) - Sydney UniversityS Kruske (Author) - University of QueenslandM Tracy (Author) - Sydney UniversityM W O'Hara (Author) - University of Iowa, United StatesS King (Author) - McGill University, Canada
- Publication details
- Archives of Women's Mental Health, Vol.21(2), pp.203-214
- Publisher
- Springer Wien
- Date published
- 2018
- DOI
- 10.1007/s00737-017-0781-2
- ISSN
- 1434-1816
- Organisation Unit
- University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland; Thompson Institute
- Language
- English
- Record Identifier
- 99451242802621
- Output Type
- Journal article
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- Domestic collaboration
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- Psychiatry
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Source: InCites