The Louis and Gabi Weisfeld School of Social Work, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan 5290001, Israel.
The Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Dec 22;20(1):110. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20010110.
COVID-19 has impacted all levels of daily life for people everywhere, with particularly serious implications for pregnant women. This paper examines the COVID-19-related childbirth anxiety (CCA) of Israeli women in the first two waves of the pandemic. We first present two psychotherapeutic case studies with pregnant women in the two waves. This is followed by an empirical study that compared the contribution of background variables, psychological distress, economic concerns, and personal resources to CCA in two samples, Wave 1, March-April 2020 ( = 403) and Wave 2, September-October 2020 ( = 1401), and two subpopulations, Jewish and Arab women. Findings reveal that CCA was significantly lower in Wave 2 than in Wave 1. Furthermore, poorer health, higher education, being an Arab, later gestational week, at-risk pregnancy, wave, higher psychological distress, greater economic concerns, and lower self-compassion contributed to higher childbirth anxiety. Wave moderated the association between optimism and anxiety. The findings of the empirical study, together with insights from the case studies, provide evidence of a decrease in CCA later in the crisis, and indicate the significance of resources for coping with the psychological implications of the pandemic. Moreover, they suggest the importance of empowering self-reliance techniques, such as self-compassion, which was significantly associated with lower anxiety, above and beyond the background and psychological variables. Clinical Impact Statement: Using both psychotherapeutic cases and empirical findings, this study points to the risk and resilience factors that contributed to pregnant women's COVID-19-related childbirth anxiety (CCA) in the first two waves of the pandemic. The study suggests that CCA was higher in the first wave, as well as among women from a minority group. At the same time, the research shows that resilience resources of optimism and self-compassion contributed to the reduction of anxiety. These findings may guide interventions for the vulnerable group of pregnant women in times of crisis.
COVID-19 对世界各地人们的日常生活造成了各个层面的影响,对孕妇的影响尤为严重。本文探讨了 COVID-19 大流行的前两个阶段中以色列孕妇的相关分娩焦虑(CCA)。我们首先呈现了两个在这两个阶段中怀孕的孕妇的心理治疗案例研究。接下来,我们进行了一项实证研究,比较了背景变量、心理困扰、经济担忧和个人资源对两个样本(第 1 波,2020 年 3-4 月,n=403 和第 2 波,2020 年 9-10 月,n=1401)和两个亚人群(犹太人和阿拉伯人)中 CCA 的贡献。研究结果显示,第 2 波的 CCA 明显低于第 1 波。此外,健康状况较差、受教育程度较高、阿拉伯人、妊娠周数较晚、高危妊娠、第 2 波、心理困扰较大、经济担忧较大和自我同情较低与更高的分娩焦虑有关。波次调节了乐观与焦虑之间的关系。实证研究的结果,加上案例研究的见解,提供了危机后期 CCA 下降的证据,并表明资源在应对大流行的心理影响方面的重要性。此外,它们表明赋予自我依赖技术(如自我同情)的重要性,自我同情与焦虑呈显著负相关,这一关系独立于背景和心理变量。临床影响陈述:本研究使用心理治疗案例和实证发现,指出了导致 COVID-19 大流行的前两个阶段中孕妇相关分娩焦虑(CCA)的风险和恢复力因素。该研究表明,第一波的 CCA 较高,而且少数民族群体中的 CCA 也较高。同时,研究表明,乐观和自我同情等恢复力资源有助于降低焦虑。这些发现可能为危机时期的弱势孕妇群体提供干预指导。