Abstract

The impact of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) on people with existing mental health conditions is likely to be high. We explored the consequences of the pandemic on women of lower socioeconomic status with prenatal anxiety symptoms living in urban Rawalpindi, Pakistan. This qualitative study was embedded within an ongoing randomized controlled trial of psychosocial intervention for prenatal anxiety at a public hospital in Rawalpindi. The participants were women with symptoms of anxiety who had received or were receiving the intervention. In total, 27 interviews were conducted; 13 women were in their third trimester of pregnancy, and 14 were in their postnatal period. The data were collected through in-depth interviews and analyzed using framework analysis. Key findings were that during the pandemic, women experienced increased perinatal anxiety that was linked to greater financial problems, uncertainties over availability of appropriate obstetric healthcare, and a lack of trust in health professionals. Women experienced increased levels of fear for their own and their baby’s health and safety, especially due to fear of infection. COVID-19 appears to have contributed to symptoms of anxiety in women already predisposed to anxiety in the prenatal period. Efforts to address women’s heightened anxiety due to the pandemic are likely to have public health benefits.

Highlights

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) declared coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)a public health emergency of international concern [1]

  • A systematic review of 19 studies on the effects of COVID-19 on psychological outcomes in the general population reported an association with highly significant levels of psychological distress that, in many cases, would meet the threshold for clinical relevance [5]

  • This study aims to provide in-depth exploration of the perceptions, fears, and perceived impact of COVID-19 among women with preexisting anxiety symptoms in the late prenatal and postnatal periods in Pakistan

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Summary

Introduction

The World Health Organization (WHO) declared coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)a public health emergency of international concern [1]. Recent studies suggest that the pandemic has affected patients’ physical health, and had a profound psychological impact on the population [2], resulting in increased emotional distress and psychological illness [3,4]. A systematic review of 19 studies on the effects of COVID-19 on psychological outcomes in the general population reported an association with highly significant levels of psychological distress that, in many cases, would meet the threshold for clinical relevance [5]. Pandemics have an even greater psychosocial effect on vulnerable populations such as people experiencing poverty [6], those with physical and mental illnesses [7], and pregnant women [8]. A US survey of 2740 pregnant women during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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