Department of Health Education & Behavior, University of Florida, Gainesville, PO Box 118210, Gainesville, FL 32611-8210, USA.
Cizik School of Nursing, University of Texas Health Science Center-Houston, 6901 Bertner Avenue, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
J Affect Disord. 2023 Nov 15;341:96-103. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2023.08.094. Epub 2023 Aug 23.
Identifying family environment factors related to food insecurity and maternal mental health could inform additional support for mothers who experience food insecurity. This study seeks to examine the mechanistic roles of co-parenting support and parenting stress on the food insecurity-maternal mental health relationship.
Data from the Future of Families and Child Well-being Study, which recruited mothers post-delivery from 75 urban hospitals, was utilized. Analysis includes 1808 mothers followed for 15 years. Food insecurity was assessed at year 5, co-parenting support and parenting stress at year 9, and maternal depression and anxiety at year 15. Structural equation models evaluated the role of food insecurity on maternal depression (model 1) and anxiety (model 2) through co-parenting support and parenting stress simultaneously, adjusting for socio-demographics.
Co-parenting support did not mediate the relationships of food insecurity and maternal depression and anxiety, controlling for parenting stress. Controlling for co-parenting support, parenting stress did not mediate the food insecurity-maternal depression relationship, but partially mediated the food insecurity-maternal anxiety relationship (specific indirect: B = 0.026, CI:0.01, 0.05; specific direct: B = 0.131, CI:-0.04, 0.32).
There was a significant period of time (10 years) between assessment of food insecurity and assessment of maternal mental health. Self-reported data on sensitive topics may be susceptible to bias. With observational research, it is possible that unobserved confounding variables impact the findings.
Cumulative support in the form of - parenting, economic (e.g., utilities), and food - may help reduce parenting stress and anxiety among mothers who experience food insecurity.
识别与食物不安全和产妇心理健康相关的家庭环境因素,可以为经历食物不安全的母亲提供额外的支持。本研究旨在探讨共同养育支持和育儿压力在食物不安全与产妇心理健康关系中的机制作用。
本研究利用了未来家庭和儿童福利研究的数据,该研究在产后从 75 家城市医院招募了母亲。分析包括了 1808 名随访 15 年的母亲。在第 5 年评估食物不安全,在第 9 年评估共同养育支持和育儿压力,在第 15 年评估产妇抑郁和焦虑。结构方程模型通过同时考虑共同养育支持和育儿压力,评估了食物不安全对产妇抑郁(模型 1)和焦虑(模型 2)的影响,同时调整了社会人口统计学因素。
在控制了育儿压力后,共同养育支持并没有中介食物不安全与产妇抑郁和焦虑之间的关系。在控制了共同养育支持后,育儿压力并没有中介食物不安全与产妇抑郁的关系,但部分中介了食物不安全与产妇焦虑的关系(特定间接:B=0.026,CI:0.01,0.05;特定直接:B=0.131,CI:-0.04,0.32)。
食物不安全和产妇心理健康评估之间存在着显著的时间间隔(10 年)。对敏感话题的自我报告数据可能容易受到偏差的影响。由于观察性研究,可能存在未被观察到的混杂变量影响研究结果。
以养育、经济(如水电费)和食物形式提供的累积支持,可能有助于减少经历食物不安全的母亲的育儿压力和焦虑。