Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health, Renaissance School of Medicine, Stony Brook University, Putnam Hall, New York, NY, 11794, USA.
Department of Psychology, Stony Brook University, New York, NY, 11794, USA.
Arch Womens Ment Health. 2022 Apr;25(2):367-376. doi: 10.1007/s00737-021-01157-w. Epub 2021 Jul 16.
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a public mental health crisis with many people experiencing new or worsening anxiety. Fear of contagion and the lack of predictability/control in daily life increased the risk for problems such as obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) in the general population. Pregnant women may be particularly vulnerable to such pandemic-related stressors yet the prevalence of OC symptoms in this population during the pandemic remains unknown. We examined the prevalence of OC symptoms in a sample of 4451 pregnant women in the USA, recruited via targeted online methods at the start of the pandemic. Participants completed self-report measures including the Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory-Revised and the Pandemic-Related Pregnancy Stress Scale. Clinically significant OC symptoms were present in 7.12% of participants, more than twice as high as rates of peripartum OCD reported prior to the pandemic. Younger maternal age, income loss, and suspected SARS-CoV-2 infection were all associated with higher OC symptoms. Two types of pregnancy-specific stress, pandemic-related and pandemic-unrelated, were both associated with higher levels of OC symptoms. Pandemic-related pregnancy stress predicted OC symptoms even after controlling for non-pandemic-related, pregnancy-specific stress. Elevated rates of OC symptoms were observed in women pregnant during the pandemic, particularly those experiencing elevated pandemic-related pregnancy stress. This type of stress confers a distinct risk for OC symptoms above and beyond pregnancy-specific stress and demographic factors. Healthcare providers should be prepared to see and treat more peripartum women with OC symptoms during this and future public health crises.
新冠疫情大流行导致公众心理健康危机,许多人出现新的或恶化的焦虑症状。对感染的恐惧以及日常生活中缺乏可预测性/控制力增加了普通人群出现强迫症(OCD)等问题的风险。孕妇可能特别容易受到此类与大流行相关的压力源影响,但在大流行期间,该人群中 OCD 症状的患病率尚不清楚。我们在美国的 4451 名孕妇中进行了一项样本研究,这些孕妇是通过大流行初期的定向在线方法招募的。参与者完成了自我报告量表,包括强迫症量表修订版和大流行相关妊娠压力量表。在参与者中,有 7.12%出现了明显的 OCD 症状,这一比例是大流行前报告的围产期 OCD 发生率的两倍多。产妇年龄较小、收入损失和疑似 SARS-CoV-2 感染都与更高的 OCD 症状有关。两种与妊娠相关的压力,与大流行相关的和与大流行无关的,都与更高水平的 OCD 症状有关。即使在控制了非大流行相关的、与妊娠相关的压力后,与大流行相关的妊娠压力仍可预测 OCD 症状。在大流行期间怀孕的女性中观察到 OCD 症状的发生率较高,尤其是那些经历了更高水平的与大流行相关的妊娠压力的女性。这种压力对 OCD 症状的影响超过了与妊娠相关的压力和人口统计学因素。医疗保健提供者应该准备好在这个和未来的公共卫生危机期间看到并治疗更多患有 OCD 症状的围产期妇女。