University of Utah College of Nursing, University of Utah, 10 2000 E, Salt Lake City, UT, 84112, USA.
Eccles Health Sciences Library, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Syst Rev. 2022 Sep 7;11(1):196. doi: 10.1186/s13643-022-02065-5.
Despite evidence that loneliness increases during times of transition, and that the incidence of loneliness is highest in young adults, loneliness during pregnancy and new parenthood has not been developed as a program of research. Because loneliness research has primarily focused on older adults and other high-risk populations, the concept of loneliness and its effects on this population are not well understood, leaving a gap in our understanding of the psychosocial needs and health risks of loneliness on pregnant people and new parents. A scoping review has been completed in order to map and synthesize the literature on loneliness experienced during pregnancy and the first 5 years of parenthood prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.
To address the aim of this review, a wide net was cast in order to detect experiences of perinatal or parental loneliness and/or instances where loneliness was measured in this population. Among the inclusion criteria were loneliness in people who were pregnant, who were parents in the postpartum period, or who had children aged 5 years or younger. A search for literature was conducted in December 2020 using nine databases: MEDLINE (Ovid), EMBASE (Elsevier), SCOPUS (Elsevier), Cochrane Library including CENTRAL (Wiley), CINAHL (Ebscohost), PsycINFO (Ebscohost), Dissertations & Theses Global (ProQuest) and Sociological Abstracts (ProQuest), and the Web of Science Core Collection (Clarivate).
Perinatal and parental loneliness studies are limited and have rarely been targeted and developed through a program of research. Loneliness inquiry in this population was frequently studied in relation to other concepts of interest (e.g., postpartum depression). Alternatively, the importance of loneliness emerged from study participants as relevant to the research topic during qualitative inquiry. Across studies, the prevalence of loneliness ranged from 32 to 100%. Loneliness was commonly experienced alongside parenting difficulties, with parents feeling as though they were alone in their struggles.
As loneliness has been called a sensitive indicator of mental wellbeing, we believe screening will help healthcare professionals identify common difficulties and early signs of depression experienced during pregnancy and parenthood.
The protocol is available on Open Science Framework at DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/BFVPZ.
尽管有证据表明,在过渡时期孤独感会增加,而且孤独感在年轻人中最高,但怀孕期间和新父母时期的孤独感尚未成为研究计划。由于孤独感研究主要集中在老年人和其他高风险人群,因此人们对这一人群的孤独感概念及其影响了解甚少,这使得我们对孕妇和新父母的孤独感对其心理健康和健康风险的理解存在空白。已经完成了范围审查,以便在 COVID-19 大流行之前,对怀孕期间和新父母的前 5 年期间经历的孤独感文献进行制图和综合。
为了实现本综述的目标,我们广泛搜索了以检测围产期或父母孤独感的经历或在该人群中测量孤独感的实例的文献。纳入标准包括怀孕、产后时期的父母或 5 岁或以下儿童的孤独感。2020 年 12 月,使用 9 个数据库(Ovid 中的 MEDLINE、Elsevier 中的 EMBASE、Elsevier 中的 SCOPUS、Wiley 中的 Cochrane Library 包括 CENTRAL、Ebscohost 中的 CINAHL、Ebscohost 中的 PsycINFO、ProQuest 中的 Dissertations & Theses Global 和 ProQuest 中的 Sociological Abstracts 以及 Clarivate 的 Web of Science Core Collection)进行了文献搜索。
围产期和父母孤独感的研究有限,并且很少通过研究计划有针对性地开发。该人群中的孤独感调查经常与其他感兴趣的概念(例如产后抑郁)一起进行研究。或者,在定性研究中,研究参与者认为孤独感与研究主题相关。在各项研究中,孤独感的患病率从 32%到 100%不等。孤独感通常与育儿困难同时发生,父母感到自己在挣扎中孤立无援。
由于孤独感被称为心理健康的敏感指标,我们相信筛查将有助于医疗保健专业人员识别怀孕期间和育儿期间常见的困难和早期抑郁迹象。
该方案可在 Open Science Framework 上查看,网址为 DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/BFVPZ。