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anxiety

Antenatal anxiety predicts child behavioral/emotional problems independently of postnatal depression

Autor(en)

O'Connor TG, Heron J, Glover V, Alspac Study Team

Veröffentlichungsdatum

2002

Ort der Sudie

UK

Abstract

The current study investigated the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, a prospective, community-based study that has followed a cohort of women since pregnancy (n = 7,144) who gave birth between April 1, 1991, and December 31, 1992. Self-report measures of maternal anxiety and depression were assessed at repeated intervals in pregnancy and the postnatal period. Children's behavioral/emotional problems were assessed by parent report at age 4 years. After controlling for smoking, alcohol use, birth weight for gestational age, maternal age, child sex, and socioeconomic status, postnatal depression at 8 weeks (OR = 2.27 [1.55-3.31]) and 8 months (OR = 1.68 [1.12-2.54]) was associated with children's behavioral/emotional problems. Subsequent analyses that included antenatal maternal mood indicated that antenatal anxiety in late pregnancy and not antenatal depression was also independently associated with behavioral/emotional problems at age 4 (OR = 1.72 [1.14-2.59]); 8 week postnatal depression remained a significant predictor after antenatal maternal mood was statistically controlled for (OR = 1.56 [1.04-2.32]). CONCLUSIONS: Antenatal anxiety and postnatal depression represent separate risks for behavioral/emotional problems in children and act in an additive manner

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