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Interpersonal factors are among the risk factors that predispose women to experiencing mood disturbances during the childbearing years. This study investigates the trajectory of change in depressive symptomatology over the course of the perinatal period as related to interpersonal risk factors (marital quality and social support) in a sample of 69 low-income, mostly immigrant Latina mothers at high and low risk for depression. We found a significant linear change in depressive symptomatology from baseline (pregnancy) through the postpartum period. This decline was steeper for high-risk women who reported high levels of social support compared with those who reported low levels of social support. In addition, a greater decline in depressive symptom scores was found for women who reported better postnatal marital quality, irrespective of risk group status. The results suggest the importance of considering marital quality and social support in estimations of risk for depression. These findings also have implications for targeting social support and marital quality in preventive interventions for perinatal depression in Latinas.
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Diaz et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a10ca3942e8aeed9aee2e33 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/1099-9809.13.4.328
Manuela A. Diaz
University of California, San Francisco
Huynh‐Nhu Le
George Washington University
Bruce A. Cooper
University of California, San Francisco
Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology
University of California, San Francisco
George Washington University
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