Social support and pregnancy:II. Its relationship with depressive symptoms among Japanese women |
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Authors: | TOSHINOFU KITAMURA FRCPsych MARI A. TODA MA SATORU SHIMA MD KENSUKE SUGAWARA PhD MASUMI SUGAWARA PhD |
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Affiliation: | Department of Sociocultural Environmental Research, National Institute of Mental Health, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, Chiba;Department of Educational Psychology, Hokkaido University of Education, Hokkaido;Tokyo Keizai University, Tokyo;Kensuke Sugawara, Edogawa University, Chiba, Japan |
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Abstract: | Abstract In a questionnaire survey among 1329 first-trimester pregnant women, both the husband support measures and unwanted pregnancy ('stressor' agent in pregnancy) showed significant effects on an elevated score of the cognitive disturbance subscale of the Zung's self-rating depression scale (SDS), while only unwanted pregnancies showed an effect on an elevated score of the dysphoric mood subscale of the SDS. However, no interaction was observed between the husband support measures and unwanted pregnancy, therefore the effect of the husband's social support on the cognitive disturbance score was not that of a buffer, but rather a main effector. Finally, multiple regression analyses showed that the dysphoric mood score was preceded by unwanted pregnancy, premenstrual irritability, public self-consciousness, and maternal overprotection; while the cognitive disturbance score was preceded by unwanted pregnancy, husband reduced 'given' and 'giving' support, maternal reduced care and overprotection, paternal reduced care, low annual income, low private self-consciousness, and smoking. These findings suggest that the husband's support for a pregnant woman is effective only in reducing cognitive symptoms, and that different symptomatic constellations have different sets of psychosocial correlates. |
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Keywords: | depression marriage parenting pregnancy self-consciousness social support |
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