Journal article
Socioeconomic deprivation and perinatal anxiety: an observational cohort study
BMC public health, Vol.24, p.12
15/11/2024
PMID: 39548501
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Abstract
Background
Women from areas of social deprivation and minority ethnic groups are more likely to experience poor physical health and have higher rates of mental health problems relative to women from less socially disadvantaged groups. However, very little research has examined this in relation to perinatal anxiety. The current study aims to determine prevalence, risk factors and desire for treatment for perinatal anxiety in three regions of the UK with diverse regional characteristics.
Methods
Women completed measures of anxiety in early, mid-, late-pregnancy and postpartum. Participants were included from three regions of the UK: Region 1 = North East England & North Cumbria n = 512; Region 2 = London North Thames n = 665; Region 3 = West Midlands n = 705.
Results
Prevalence of perinatal anxiety was lower in Region 1 (OR 0.63 95% CI 0.45 to 0.89) and Region 2 (OR 0.72 95% CI 0.52 to 0.98) relative to Region 3. Analysis showed the effect of neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation on perinatal anxiety differed by region. In more affluent regions, living in a deprived neighbourhood had a greater impact on perinatal anxiety than living in a deprived neighbourhood in a deprived region. Other factors associated with risk of anxiety in the perinatal period included physical health problems and identifying as being from 'mixed or multiple' ethnic groups.
Conclusions
Neighbourhood deprivation relative to regional deprivation is a better predictor of perinatal anxiety than either regional deprivation or neighbourhood deprivation alone. Women of mixed ethnic backgrounds and women with physical health problems may warrant more attention in terms of screening and support for perinatal anxiety. Self-reported desire for treatment was found to be low.
Details
- Title
- Socioeconomic deprivation and perinatal anxiety: an observational cohort study
- Creators
- Catherine Best - University of StirlingSusan Ayers - City, University of LondonAndrea Sinesi - University of StirlingRose Meades - City, University of LondonHelen Cheyne - University of StirlingMargaret Maxwell - University of StirlingStacey McNicol - University of StirlingLouise R. Williams - City, University of LondonFiona Alderdice - Oxford Population Health (UK, Oxford)Julie Jomeen - Southern Cross UniversityJudy ShakespeareMAP (Methods of Assessing Perinatal Anxiety) Study Team (Institution)
- Publication Details
- BMC public health, Vol.24, p.12
- Publisher
- Springer Nature
- Number of pages
- 12
- Grant note
- This work was supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), Health Services & Delivery Research Programme (NIHR 17/105/16).
- Identifiers
- 991013236411902368
- Copyright
- © The Author(s) 2024
- Academic Unit
- Nursing; Faculty of Health
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article