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The social predictors of paternal antenatal mental health and their associations with maternal mental health in the Queensland Family Cohort prospective study

Authors :
Barnaby J. W. Dixson
Danielle Borg
Kym M. Rae
Koa Whittingha
Brenda Gannon
Steven M. McPhail
Hannah E. Carter
Karen M. Moritz
Roslyn N. Boyd
Samudragupta Bora
Sailesh Kumar
Julanne Frater
Daniel Schweitzer
Paul Miller
Divya Mehter
Vicki L. Clifton
Source :
Archives of Women's Mental Health. 26:107-116
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Antenatal depression (AND) affects 1 in 10 fathers, potentially negatively impacting maternal mental health and well-being during and after the transition to parenthood. However, few studies have assessed the social predictors of paternal AND or their possible associations with maternal mental health. We analysed data from 180 couples participating in the Queensland Family Cohort longitudinal study. Both parents completed surveys measuring mental health, relationship quality, social support, and sleep quality at 24 weeks of pregnancy. Mothers also completed the same surveys 6 weeks’ postpartum. Antenatal depression, stress, and anxiety were highest among fathers reporting lower social support and higher sleep impairment. Maternal AND, stress, and anxiety were higher among mothers reporting higher physical pain and poor sleep quality. Postnatally, mothers reporting lower social support also reported higher depression, anxiety, stress, and psycho-social well-being. While there were no significant associations between AND among fathers and maternal antenatal or postnatal depression, an exploratory analysis revealed that mothers whose partners reported lower antenatal social support also reported lower postnatal social support and higher postnatal depression. Our findings highlight the importance of including data among fathers to achieve a whole family approach to well-being during the transition to parenthood.

Details

ISSN :
14351102 and 14341816
Volume :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of Women's Mental Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........caa2f149dd8325089a70afa13a8d4430