Abstract

BackgroundThe depression mood during their second and third trimesters has a negative impact on both the mother and her child. Compared with pregnant women in urban areas, rural pregnant women who are in more disadvantaged situation may have more serious psychological problems. Particular, many rural pregnant women had internal migrant work experience during pregnancy in rural China. It is thus necessary to study the prevalence of depressive symptoms and correlated factors among Chinese northwest rural pregnant women.MethodsThis study was conducted from October 2017 to April 2018 and surveyed 1053 pregnant women in the middle and late stages of pregnancy who were registered in rural areas, gave informed consent and did not suffer from cognitive impairment or severe mental illness. Depressive symptoms were evaluated by the Chinese Version of the Short Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS-C21). Demographic characteristics, pregnancy characteristics and family factors were obtained through structured questionnaires. This study employed multiple factor logistic regression to analyze the relationship between depressive symptoms and their correlates.ResultsThe prevalence of depressive symptoms among pregnant women during their second and third trimesters was 16.14% (95%CI 13.92%-18.36%). Higher education levels (OR = 0.50; 95%CI 0.29–0.85) and taking folic acid (OR = 0.59; 95%CI 0.39–0.89) reduced the risk of depression symptoms. The family receiving rural welfare (OR = 1.69; 95%CI 1.04–2.75), migration for work (OR = 1.95; 95%CI 1.03–3.71) and living with both parents and parents-in-law (OR = 2.55; 95%CI 1.09–5.96) increased the risk of depressive symptoms.ConclusionsThe prevalence of depressive symptoms among pregnant women during their second and third trimesters in Northwest rural China was 16.14% that was nearly 4 percentage points higher than the average survey result of the pregnant women in developed countries and was higher than the findings in Chinese urban areas. To prevent depression symptoms, it’s essential to early screen and provide folic acid for free when antenatal examination. Moreover, maternal examination files should be established so that wo pay attention to the psychological status of pregnant women who were with low education levels, poor family economic situations, excessive parental burden and who had been migrant workers.

Highlights

  • The depression mood during their second and third trimesters has a negative impact on both the mother and her child

  • While pregnancy is a normal psychosocial event for women, it can lead to large psychological changes, and pregnant women may go through a series of depressive behaviors [1]

  • From our sample of 1053 pregnant women in their second and third trimesters in rural Northwestern China, we found that the incidence rate of depression symptoms was 16.14% (95%CI 13.92%18.36%), which was consistent with 15.6% on average in developing countries, but nearly 4 percentage points higher than the average survey result of the pregnant women in developed countries in the second and third pregnancy [44]

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Summary

Introduction

The depression mood during their second and third trimesters has a negative impact on both the mother and her child. The depression mood during pregnancy has become a serious problem, and recent evidence confirms that it can have a negative impact on both the mother and her child [2, 3]. Depression threatens the health, marriage and family relations of pregnant women [5]. It seriously affects pregnancy outcomes like prematurity of birth, birth weight, and head circumference [6, 7], and may influence the mood, cognitive ability and the language and behavior development of the child [2]. Depression has a large impact on mother-child relationships [8]

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