Zelis Tsofia, Shapira Stav
School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel.
School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel.
Midwifery. 2025 Aug;147:104425. doi: 10.1016/j.midw.2025.104425. Epub 2025 Apr 17.
Women exposed to conflict are at greater risk of experiencing adverse mental health impacts, and women in the postpartum period may face additional distress and heightened risk. Resilience resources, known to mitigate the impacts of stressful events, could offer protection to these new mothers. The current study aimed to assess whether conflict exposure was associated with greater postpartum depression symptoms, and whether three distinct resilience resources - personal resilience, community resilience, and social support - would moderate this association among women highly exposed to an ongoing conflict.
This comparative cross-sectional study included 110 women from regions with high conflict exposure near the Israel-Gaza border and 210 women from areas with lower conflict exposure of Israel. Depression symptoms were evaluated six months postpartum, alongside measures of conflict exposure and personal and collective resilience resources. Multiple linear regression analyses tested the hypotheses.
Higher conflict exposure was not associated with increased postpartum depression symptoms. Instead, all resilience resources showed a negative association with depression symptoms. Notably, community resilience significantly moderated the effect of conflict exposure on postpartum depression among highly exposed women, after adjusting for personal characteristics.
The study's cross-sectional design and reliance on online data collection may have introduced a selection bias.
These findings underscore the critical protective role of community resilience for new mothers in conflict-laden regions. They indicate the importance of mental health interventions that bolster not just individual resilience but also community support, and suggest a shift toward more integrative, community-focused approaches in addressing mental health challenges in such settings.
经历冲突的女性面临更严重的心理健康不良影响风险,而处于产后阶段的女性可能会面临额外的困扰和更高的风险。已知具有缓解压力事件影响作用的复原力资源,可为这些新妈妈提供保护。本研究旨在评估接触冲突是否与更严重的产后抑郁症状相关,以及三种不同的复原力资源——个人复原力、社区复原力和社会支持——是否会在高度接触持续冲突的女性中调节这种关联。
这项比较性横断面研究纳入了来自以色列-加沙边境附近冲突暴露程度高的地区的110名女性和来自以色列冲突暴露程度较低地区的210名女性。在产后六个月评估抑郁症状,同时测量冲突暴露以及个人和集体复原力资源。采用多元线性回归分析来检验假设。
更高的冲突暴露与产后抑郁症状增加无关。相反,所有复原力资源均与抑郁症状呈负相关。值得注意的是,在调整个人特征后,社区复原力显著调节了冲突暴露对高暴露女性产后抑郁的影响。
该研究的横断面设计以及对在线数据收集的依赖可能引入了选择偏倚。
这些发现强调了社区复原力对冲突地区新妈妈的关键保护作用。它们表明心理健康干预不仅要增强个人复原力,还要加强社区支持,这一点很重要,并建议在应对此类环境中的心理健康挑战时转向更综合、以社区为重点的方法。