Martin Anne, Miller Elizabeth B, Gross Rachel S, Morris-Perez Pamela A, Shaw Daniel S, da Rosa Piccolo Luciane, Hill Jennifer, Scott Marc A, Messito Mary Jo, Canfield Caitlin F, O'Connell Lauren, Sadler Richard C, Aviles Ashleigh I, Krug Chelsea Weaver, Kim Christina N, Gutierrez Juliana, Shroff Ravi, Mendelsohn Alan L
NYU Grossman School of Medicine, 550 First Avenue, New York, NY, 10016, USA.
NYU Grossman School of Medicine, 550 First Avenue, New York, NY, 10016, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2025 Feb;366:117636. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117636. Epub 2024 Dec 14.
The COVID-19 pandemic increased maternal depression and anxiety, imperiling both mothers' own wellbeing and that of their children. To date, however, little is known about the extent to which these increases are attributable to economic hardships commonly experienced during the pandemic: income loss, job loss, and loss of health insurance. Few studies have examined the individual impacts of these hardships, and none have lasted beyond the first year of the pandemic. This study harmonizes data from six evaluations of pediatric-based parenting programs for women with young children and low incomes across three U.S. cities (N = 1,254). Low-income mothers are of special interest because their families have been disproportionately affected by economic shocks due to COVID-19, and mothers of young children have been more distressed than other mothers by COVID-19. The studies' combined window of observation lasted from the onset of the pandemic to over three years later. Results indicate that income loss, job loss, and health insurance loss were all significantly associated with depression and anxiety. When each hardship was assessed net of the others, lost income was associated with more than a two-fold increase in the odds of anxiety, and a lost job and lost health insurance were associated with 50% and 90% greater odds of depression, respectively. Associations between hardships and maternal mental health did not diminish over time during the window of observation. These associations are likely to have been even greater in the absence of generous social policies enacted during the pandemic.
新冠疫情加剧了孕产妇的抑郁和焦虑情绪,危及母亲自身及其子女的健康。然而,迄今为止,对于这些情绪增加在多大程度上可归因于疫情期间普遍经历的经济困难(收入损失、失业和失去医疗保险),人们知之甚少。很少有研究考察这些困难的个体影响,而且没有一项研究持续到疫情的第一年之后。本研究整合了来自美国三个城市针对低收入有幼儿女性的六项基于儿科的育儿项目评估的数据(N = 1254)。低收入母亲受到特别关注,因为她们的家庭受新冠疫情经济冲击的影响尤为严重,而且幼儿母亲比其他母亲因新冠疫情更痛苦。这些研究的综合观察期从疫情开始持续到三年多以后。结果表明,收入损失、失业和失去医疗保险都与抑郁和焦虑显著相关。当分别评估每种困难而不考虑其他困难时,收入损失与焦虑几率增加两倍多相关,失业和失去医疗保险分别与抑郁几率增加50%和90%相关。在观察期内,困难与孕产妇心理健康之间的关联并未随着时间的推移而减弱。在没有疫情期间实施的慷慨社会政策的情况下,这些关联可能会更大。