Steinberg Julia R, Tschann Jeanne M, Furgerson Dorothy, Harper Cynthia C
Department of Family Science, University of Maryland College Park, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2016 Feb;150:67-75. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.12.007. Epub 2015 Dec 12.
Most research in mental health and abortion has examined factors associated with post-abortion psychological health. However, research that follows women from before to after their abortion consistently finds that depressive, anxiety, and stress symptoms are highest just before an abortion compared to any time afterwards.
This finding suggests that studies investigating psychosocial factors related to pre-abortion mental health are warranted.
The current study uses data from 353 women seeking abortions at three community reproductive health clinics to examine predictors of pre-abortion psychological health. Drawing from three perspectives in the abortion and mental health literature, common risks, stress and coping, and sociocultural context, we conducted multivariable analyses to examine the contribution of important factors on depressive, anxiety, and stress symptoms just before an abortion, including sociodemographics, abortion characteristics, childhood adversities, recent adversities with an intimate partner, relationship context, future pregnancy desires, and perceived abortion stigma.
Childhood and partner adversities, including reproductive coercion, were associated with negative mental health symptoms, as was perceived abortion stigma. Before perceived abortion stigma was entered into the model, 18.6%, 20.7%, and 16.8% of the variance in depressive, anxiety, and stress symptoms respectively, was explained. Perceived abortion stigma explained an additional 13.2%, 9.7%, and 10.7% of the variance in depressive, anxiety, and stress symptoms pre-abortion.
This study, one of the first to focus on pre-abortion mental health as an outcome, suggests that addressing stigma among women seeking abortions may significantly lower their psychological distress.
大多数关于心理健康与堕胎的研究都考察了与堕胎后心理健康相关的因素。然而,对女性从堕胎前到堕胎后的跟踪研究一致发现,与之后的任何时候相比,抑郁、焦虑和压力症状在堕胎前最为严重。
这一发现表明,对与堕胎前心理健康相关的社会心理因素进行研究是有必要的。
本研究使用了来自三家社区生殖健康诊所的353名寻求堕胎的女性的数据,以检验堕胎前心理健康的预测因素。从堕胎与心理健康文献中的三个视角,即常见风险、压力与应对以及社会文化背景出发,我们进行了多变量分析,以检验重要因素对堕胎前抑郁、焦虑和压力症状的影响,这些因素包括社会人口统计学特征、堕胎特点、童年逆境、近期与亲密伴侣的逆境、关系背景、未来生育意愿以及感知到的堕胎耻辱感。
童年和伴侣方面的逆境,包括生殖胁迫,与负面心理健康症状相关,感知到的堕胎耻辱感也是如此。在将感知到的堕胎耻辱感纳入模型之前,抑郁、焦虑和压力症状的方差分别有18.6%、20.7%和16.8%得到了解释。感知到的堕胎耻辱感在堕胎前又分别解释了抑郁、焦虑和压力症状方差的13.2%、9.7%和10.7%。
本研究是首批将堕胎前心理健康作为研究结果的研究之一,表明消除寻求堕胎女性的耻辱感可能会显著降低她们的心理困扰。