Choi Karmel W, Smit Jenni A, Coleman Jessica N, Mosery Nzwakie, Bangsberg David R, Safren Steven A, Psaros Christina
Psychiatric and Neurodevelopmental Genetics Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, 185 Cambridge Street, Boston, MA, 02114, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Int J Behav Med. 2019 Apr;26(2):207-216. doi: 10.1007/s12529-019-09774-7.
Psychosocial risks during pregnancy impact maternal health in resource-limited settings, and HIV-positive women often bear a heavy burden of these factors. This study sought to use network modeling to characterize co-occurring psychosocial risks to maternal and child health among at-risk pregnant women.
Two hundred pregnant HIV-positive women attending antenatal care in South Africa were enrolled. Measured risk factors included younger age, low income, low education, unemployment, unintended pregnancy, distress about pregnancy, antenatal depression, internalized HIV stigma, violence exposure, and lack of social support. Network analysis between risk factors was conducted in R using mixed graphical modeling. Centrality statistics were examined for each risk node in the network.
In the resulting network, unintended pregnancy was strongly tied to distress about pregnancy. Distress about pregnancy was most central in the network and was connected to antenatal depression and HIV stigma. Unintended pregnancy was also associated with lack of social support, which was itself linked to antenatal depression, HIV stigma, and low income. Finally, antenatal depression was connected to violence exposure.
Our results characterize a network of psychosocial risks among pregnant HIV-positive women. Distress about pregnancy emerged as central to this network, suggesting that unintended pregnancy is particularly distressing in this population and may contribute to further risks to maternal health, such as depression. Prevention of unintended pregnancies and interventions for coping with unplanned pregnancies may be particularly useful where multiple risks intersect. Efforts addressing single risk factors should consider an integrated, multilevel approach to support women during pregnancy.
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03069417.
在资源有限的环境中,孕期的社会心理风险会影响孕产妇健康,而感染艾滋病毒的女性往往承受着这些因素带来的沉重负担。本研究旨在使用网络建模来描述高危孕妇中同时存在的对母婴健康的社会心理风险。
招募了200名在南非接受产前护理的感染艾滋病毒的孕妇。测量的风险因素包括年龄较小、低收入、低教育水平、失业、意外怀孕、对怀孕的困扰、产前抑郁、内化的艾滋病毒耻辱感、暴力暴露以及缺乏社会支持。使用混合图形建模在R中对风险因素之间进行网络分析。检查网络中每个风险节点的中心性统计数据。
在生成的网络中,意外怀孕与对怀孕的困扰紧密相关。对怀孕的困扰在网络中最为核心,并且与产前抑郁和艾滋病毒耻辱感相关。意外怀孕还与缺乏社会支持有关,而缺乏社会支持本身又与产前抑郁、艾滋病毒耻辱感和低收入相关。最后,产前抑郁与暴力暴露有关。
我们的结果描述了感染艾滋病毒的孕妇中的社会心理风险网络。对怀孕的困扰在这个网络中显得至关重要,这表明意外怀孕在这一人群中尤其令人苦恼,并且可能导致对孕产妇健康的进一步风险,如抑郁。在多种风险交织的情况下,预防意外怀孕以及应对意外怀孕的干预措施可能特别有用。针对单一风险因素的努力应考虑采用综合、多层次的方法来在孕期支持女性。
ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT03069417。