Kingston Dawn, Austin Marie-Paule, McDonald Sheila W, Vermeyden Lydia, Heaman Maureen, Hegadoren Kathleen, Lasiuk Gerri, Kingston Joshua, Sword Wendy, Jarema Karly, Veldhuyzen van Zanten Sander, McDonald Sarah D, Biringer Anne
Faculty of Nursing, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
St John of God Chair Perinatal & Women's Mental Health, School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
PLoS One. 2015 Dec 22;10(12):e0145189. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0145189. eCollection 2015.
A widely held concern of screening is that its psychological harms may outweigh the benefits of early detection and treatment. This study describes pregnant women's perceptions of possible harms and benefits of mental health screening and factors associated with identifying screening as harmful or beneficial.
This study analyzed a subgroup of women who had undergone formal or informal mental health screening from our larger multi-site, cross-sectional study. Pregnant women >16 years of age who spoke/read English were recruited (May-December 2013) from prenatal classes and maternity clinics in Alberta, Canada. Descriptive statistics were generated to summarize harms and benefits of screening and multivariable logistic regression identified factors associated with reporting at least one harm or affirming screening as a positive experience (January-December 2014).
Overall study participation rate was 92% (N = 460/500). Among women screened for mental health concerns (n = 238), 63% viewed screening as positive, 69% were glad to be asked, and 87% took it as evidence their provider cared about them. Only one woman identified screening as a negative experience. Of the 6 harms, none was endorsed by >7% of women, with embarrassment being most cited. Women who were very comfortable (vs somewhat/not comfortable) with screening were more likely to report it as a positive experience.
Women were largely Caucasian, well-educated, partnered women; thus, findings may not be generalizable to women with socioeconomic risk.
Most women perceived prenatal mental health screening as having high benefit and low harm. These findings dispel popular concerns that mental health screening is psychologically harmful.
筛查引发的一个广泛担忧是,其心理危害可能超过早期发现和治疗带来的益处。本研究描述了孕妇对心理健康筛查可能带来的危害和益处的看法,以及与将筛查视为有害或有益相关的因素。
本研究分析了我们规模更大的多中心横断面研究中接受过正式或非正式心理健康筛查的女性亚组。2013年5月至12月,从加拿大艾伯塔省的产前课程和产科诊所招募了年龄大于16岁、会说/读英语的孕妇。生成描述性统计数据以总结筛查的危害和益处,并通过多变量逻辑回归确定与报告至少一项危害或将筛查确认为积极体验相关的因素(2014年1月至12月)。
总体研究参与率为92%(N = 460/500)。在接受心理健康筛查的女性(n = 238)中,63%认为筛查是积极的,69%很高兴被询问,87%将其视为她们的医疗服务提供者关心她们的证据。只有一名女性将筛查视为负面经历。在6项危害中,没有一项被超过7%的女性认可,尴尬是被提及最多的。对筛查非常放心(与有点/不放心相比)的女性更有可能将其报告为积极体验。
女性大多是白人、受过良好教育且有伴侣的女性;因此,研究结果可能不适用于有社会经济风险的女性。
大多数女性认为产前心理健康筛查益处大、危害小。这些发现消除了人们普遍担心的心理健康筛查在心理上有害的担忧。