Abstract
Many epidemiological studies have reported the association between various social factors and health status in mothers during and after pregnancy. However, little is known about their joint and longitudinal impact. We therefore examined the association of lack of social support and trust during pregnancy and at 2.5 years postpartum with health status in mothers. To adequately address time-varying exposure, marginal structural models were fitted to a pseudopopulation constructed by inverse probability weighting. The model included records of 90,071 mothers participating in the Japan Environment and Children's Study. Social support and trust were measured using a 9-item questionnaire (Q1-9). Mental and physical health were measured using Mental and Physical Component Summary scores from the 8-item Short-Form Health Survey. For the Mental Component Summary, the magnitude of the effect estimate was largest when participants lacked close friends/neighbors (Q4) at only 2.5 years postpartum (= -6.23), followed by a lack in emotional support (Q2) at the same time point (= -4.94). For the Physical Component Summary, effect estimates were negligible. The magnitude of the effect estimates of lack of social support and trust tended to be larger when there was a lack at only 2.5 years postpartum than at both time points. These findings suggest that, after childbirth, a loss in social support, particularly in a concrete or instrumental aspect, carries high risk, especially for mental health. Our results highlight the importance of supporting mothers for more than a few years after pregnancy.
Highlights
Women have heightened vulnerability to health problems during the perinatal and postpartum period
Continuing on from this work,[19] we examined the association of social support and trust during pregnancy and at 2.5 years postpartum with mental and physical health in mothers at 2.5 years postpartum in the present study
As an extension of our previous study,[19] we used Japan Environment and Children’s Study (JECS) data to calculate the effect estimates of a time-varying lack of various types of social support or trust on the Mental Component Summary (MCS) and Physical Component Summary (PCS) scores of the SF-8 in mothers using marginal structural models (MSMs) fitted to a pseudopopulation created by inverse probability (IP) weightings
Summary
Women have heightened vulnerability to health problems during the perinatal and postpartum period. The reported prevalence of chronic pain due to childbirth is 6.1% at 2.3 years postpartum[8] and 9.3% from 1 to 5 years,[9] and the prevalence of depression at 2 years postpartum is 13%.10 Such chronic health problems reduce quality of life,[8,11] and are associated with behavioral and psychiatric problems in children.[12,13,14] studies examining postpartum mothers should pay more attention to these problems over a prolonged period of time. Many epidemiological studies have reported the association between various social factors and health status in mothers during and after pregnancy. We examined the association of lack of social support and trust during pregnancy and at 2.5 years postpartum with health status in mothers
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