Maternal Psychopathological Profile during Childbirth and Neonatal Development during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Pre-Posttest Study
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Pregnant women Childbirth Psychopathological profile Coronavirus COVID-19
Fecha
2023-01-18Referencia bibliográfica
Martinez-Vazquez, S... [et al.]. Maternal Psychopathological Profile during Childbirth and Neonatal Development during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Pre-Posttest Study. Behav. Sci. 2023, 13, 80. [https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13020080]
Patrocinador
Junta de Andalucia RH-0069- 2021Resumen
The coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 generated an alert that became a state of emergency in health
issuesworldwide, a situation that affected the entire population, including pregnantwomen. The present
study aims to understand the effect of the psychopathological profile of a sample of pregnant women at
the time of the COVID-19 pandemic on themselves during childbirth (Phase 1) and after childbirth and
the anthropometric measures of the neonate at birth (Phase 2). The total sample comprises 81 pregnant
women aged 32.07 years (SD = 5.45) and their neonates. Sociodemographic and obstetric data of the
sample were collected. During pregnancy, psychopathology was measured by means of the SCL-90, as
well as other psychologicalmeasures on stress and social support. Cluster k-means techniqueswere used
to uncover the heterogeneous profiles of psychopathology in Phase 1. Two main psychopathological
profiles were found (Cluster 1: High psychopathological symptoms; Cluster 2: Low psychopathological
symptoms). The clusters generated show significant differences in all the SCL-90-R subscales used
and in the general index at Phase 1. After childbirth, high psychopathology profile membership was
associated with a greater probability of having a non-eutocic delivery. On the other hand, the low
psychopathological symptoms cluster shows higher levels of depressive symptoms, hostility, paranoid
ideation, and psychotic symptoms in Phase 2. In conclusion, there seemed to exist two heterogeneous
profiles of psychopathology in pregnant women during the pandemic; the stress related to the pandemic
seemed uninfluential on the development of a profile of high psychopathological symptoms and the
psychopathology profile may influence delivery and postpartum outcomes.