NIHR Policy Research Unit in Maternal and Neonatal Health and Care National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford Old Road Campus Headington, Oxford, OX3 7LF, UK.
Department of Medical Statistics, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2024 May 9;24(1):352. doi: 10.1186/s12884-024-06383-5.
Posttraumatic stress (PTS) and anxiety are common mental health problems among parents of babies admitted to a neonatal unit (NNU). This review aimed to identify sociodemographic, pregnancy and birth, and psychological factors associated with PTS and anxiety in this population.
Studies published up to December 2022 were retrieved by searching Medline, Embase, PsychoINFO, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health electronic databases. The modified Newcastle-Ottawa Scale for cohort and cross-sectional studies was used to assess the methodological quality of included studies. This review was pre-registered in PROSPERO (CRD42021270526).
Forty-nine studies involving 8,447 parents were included; 18 studies examined factors for PTS, 24 for anxiety and 7 for both. Only one study of anxiety factors was deemed to be of good quality. Studies generally included a small sample size and were methodologically heterogeneous. Pooling of data was not feasible. Previous history of mental health problems (four studies) and parental perception of more severe infant illness (five studies) were associated with increased risk of PTS, and had the strongest evidence. Shorter gestational age (≤ 33 weeks) was associated with an increased risk of anxiety (three studies) and very low birth weight (< 1000g) was associated with an increased risk of both PTS and anxiety (one study). Stress related to the NNU environment was associated with both PTS (one study) and anxiety (two studies), and limited data suggested that early engagement in infant's care (one study), efficient parent-staff communication (one study), adequate social support (two studies) and positive coping mechanisms (one study) may be protective factors for both PTS and anxiety. Perinatal anxiety, depression and PTS were all highly comorbid conditions (as with the general population) and the existence of one mental health condition was a risk factor for others.
Heterogeneity limits the interpretation of findings. Until clearer evidence is available on which parents are most at risk, good communication with parents and universal screening of PTS and anxiety for all parents whose babies are admitted to NNU is needed to identify those parents who may benefit most from mental health interventions.
创伤后应激(PTS)和焦虑是新生儿重症监护病房(NNU)婴儿父母常见的心理健康问题。本综述旨在确定与该人群 PTS 和焦虑相关的社会人口学、妊娠和分娩以及心理因素。
通过检索 Medline、Embase、PsychoINFO、护理和联合健康电子数据库的累积索引,检索截至 2022 年 12 月发表的研究。使用改良的纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表对队列和横断面研究进行方法学质量评估。本综述在 PROSPERO(CRD42021270526)上进行了预先注册。
共纳入 49 项研究,涉及 8447 名父母;18 项研究检查了 PTS 的因素,24 项研究检查了焦虑的因素,7 项研究检查了两者的因素。只有一项关于焦虑因素的研究被认为质量较好。研究总体样本量较小,方法学异质性较大。数据合并不可行。先前有心理健康问题史(四项研究)和父母对婴儿病情更严重的感知(五项研究)与 PTS 风险增加相关,并有最强的证据。较短的胎龄(≤33 周)与焦虑风险增加相关(三项研究),极低出生体重(<1000g)与 PTS 和焦虑风险增加相关(一项研究)。与 NNU 环境相关的压力与 PTS(一项研究)和焦虑(两项研究)相关,有限的数据表明,早期参与婴儿护理(一项研究)、父母与工作人员之间有效的沟通(一项研究)、充足的社会支持(两项研究)和积极的应对机制(一项研究)可能是 PTS 和焦虑的保护因素。围产期焦虑、抑郁和 PTS 都是高度共病的疾病(与一般人群一样),一种心理健康状况的存在是其他状况的危险因素。
异质性限制了对研究结果的解释。在针对哪些父母风险最大的证据更加明确之前,需要与父母进行良好的沟通,并对所有婴儿入住 NNU 的父母进行 PTS 和焦虑的普遍筛查,以确定那些最有可能从心理健康干预中受益的父母。