Mann Joshua R, McKeown Robert E, Bacon Janice, Vesselinov Roumen, Bush Freda
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of South Carolina School of Medicine, Columbia, South Carolina 29203, USA.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2008 Jun;17(5):745-55. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2007.0627.
Previous research has identified an inverse relationship between religiosity/spirituality and depressive symptoms. However, prospective studies are needed. This study investigates the association between antenatal religiosity/spirituality and postpartum depression, controlling for antenatal depressive symptoms, social support, and other potential confounders.
This is a prospective cohort study. Women receiving prenatal care were enrolled from three obstetrics practices. Follow-up assessment was conducted at the 6-week postpartum clinic visit. Four measures of religiosity and two measures of spirituality were assessed at baseline. A measure of overall religiosity/spirituality was also created using principal component factor analysis. Depressive symptoms were measured at baseline and again at follow-up using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS). A cutoff score of >or=13 was used to identify women with significant depressive symptoms.
Four hundred four women were enrolled, and 374 completed follow-up. Thirty women experienced pregnancy loss, leaving 344 with postpartum assessment; 307 women had complete data and were used for analyses. Thirty-six women (11.7%) scored above the EPDS screening cutoff. Controlling for significant covariates (baseline EPDS score and social support), women who participated in organized religious activities at least a few times a month were markedly less likely (OR = 0.18, 95% CI) to exhibit high depressive symptom scores. No other religiosity/spirituality measure was statistically significant.
Organized religious participation appears to be protective from postpartum depressive symptoms. Because this association is independent of antenatal depressive symptoms, we hypothesize that religious participation assists in coping with the stress of early motherhood.
以往研究已确定宗教信仰/精神性与抑郁症状之间存在负相关关系。然而,仍需要前瞻性研究。本研究调查产前宗教信仰/精神性与产后抑郁之间的关联,并对产前抑郁症状、社会支持及其他潜在混杂因素进行控制。
这是一项前瞻性队列研究。从三家产科诊所招募接受产前护理的女性。在产后6周门诊随访时进行评估。在基线时评估了四项宗教信仰指标和两项精神性指标。还使用主成分因子分析创建了一项总体宗教信仰/精神性指标。使用爱丁堡产后抑郁量表(EPDS)在基线和随访时测量抑郁症状。采用≥13的临界值来确定有显著抑郁症状的女性。
共招募了404名女性,374名完成随访。30名女性发生流产,344名接受产后评估;307名女性有完整数据并用于分析。36名女性(11.7%)的得分高于EPDS筛查临界值。在对显著协变量(基线EPDS得分和社会支持)进行控制后,每月至少参加几次有组织宗教活动的女性出现高抑郁症状得分的可能性显著降低(OR = 0.18,95%CI)。其他宗教信仰/精神性指标均无统计学意义。
有组织的宗教参与似乎对产后抑郁症状有预防作用。由于这种关联独立于产前抑郁症状,我们推测宗教参与有助于应对初为人母的压力。