Patibandla Sravya, Haile Zelalem T
Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, Dublin, OH, USA.
Department of Social Medicine, Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, 6775 Bobcat Way, Dublin, OH, 43016, USA.
Matern Child Health J. 2025 Apr;29(4):515-526. doi: 10.1007/s10995-025-04073-y. Epub 2025 Mar 20.
This study aimed to (1) examine the relationship between infant-mother room-sharing and postpartum depression (PPD) symptoms and (2) determine whether the relationship between infant-mother room-sharing and PPD symptoms varies by other maternal or infant characteristics.
This cross-sectional study utilized de-identified secondary data from the 2016-2019 Pregnancy Risk Assessment and Monitoring System (PRAMS) (N=105,144). Frequencies and percentages were used to describe the characteristics of the study sample. Rao-Scott chi-square tests were used to examine differences in PPD symptoms and infant-mother room-sharing by maternal and infant characteristics. Multivariable logistic regression was performed to examine the independent association between infant sleeping arrangements and PPD symptoms. Pairwise interaction between infant sleeping arrangement and each covariate were included in the regression model, and stratified analyses were performed for variables with significant pairwise interactions.
The prevalence of PPD symptoms was 11.7%, and 79.5% reported that their infant sleeps in the same room. Significant pairwise interactions were found between infant-mother room-sharing and marital status, education, insurance, and receipt of WIC food assistance on PPD symptoms. The odds of having PPD symptoms were higher in those whose infants shared the same room compared to those whose infants slept in a different room. However, the observed association was present only in the subgroups of participants who were married, had greater than a high school level of education, had private insurance, and did not receive WIC food assistance during pregnancy.
Findings suggest that infant-mother room-sharing is independently associated with increased odds of PPD symptoms.
本研究旨在(1)探讨母婴同室与产后抑郁(PPD)症状之间的关系,以及(2)确定母婴同室与PPD症状之间的关系是否因其他母亲或婴儿特征而有所不同。
这项横断面研究利用了2016 - 2019年妊娠风险评估与监测系统(PRAMS)中去识别化的二手数据(N = 105,144)。频率和百分比用于描述研究样本的特征。Rao - Scott卡方检验用于检验按母亲和婴儿特征划分的PPD症状及母婴同室情况的差异。进行多变量逻辑回归以检验婴儿睡眠安排与PPD症状之间的独立关联。回归模型纳入了婴儿睡眠安排与每个协变量之间的成对交互作用,并对具有显著成对交互作用的变量进行分层分析。
PPD症状的患病率为11.7%,79.5%的人报告他们的婴儿与自己睡在同一房间。在母婴同室与婚姻状况、教育程度、保险以及接受WIC食品援助对PPD症状的影响方面发现了显著的成对交互作用。与婴儿睡在不同房间的母亲相比,婴儿与自己睡在同一房间的母亲出现PPD症状的几率更高。然而,这种关联仅在已婚、教育程度高于高中、有私人保险且孕期未接受WIC食品援助的参与者亚组中存在。
研究结果表明,母婴同室与PPD症状几率增加独立相关。