Scientific article OCT 2018
First-time mothers' psychosocial functioning in the first months postpartum. A cohort study
Authors:
- Ingeborg Hedegaard Kristensen
- Marianne Simonsen
- Tea Trillingsgaard
- Maiken W. Pontoppidan
- Hanne Kronborg
- Social issues
- Children, youth and family
- Health Social issues, Children, youth and family, Health
Objectives: The aims were to describe first-time mothers’ confidence, mood and stress 2 and 6 months postpartum
and to investigate the extent to which the tools measuring maternal confidence and maternal mood used
alone or together at 2 months postpartum predict first-time maternal confidence, mood and stress 6 months
postpartum.
Design: A cohort including 513 first-time mothers’ self-reported questionnaires concerning three scales: The
Karitane Parenting Confidence Scale (KPCS), the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), and the Parental
Stress Scale (PSS) collected 2 and 6 months postpartum. Descriptive statistic, simple and multiple linear regression
analysis were used.
Results: First-time mothers’ with confidence scores below the clinical cut-off (KPCS<40) fell significantly from
25% to 14% (p < 0.001), symptoms of depression above the clinical cut-off (EPDS≥8) fell significantly from
16% to 12% (p < 0.001), and parental stress as a mother fell significantly from a mean of 32.88 to 30.98
(p < 0.001). The KPCS assessed at 2 months postpartum was the strongest predictor for both maternal confidence
(R2=0.38) and parental stress (R2=0.26) 6 months postpartum.
Conclusion: The results support the assumption that parenthood is a complicated period for first-time mothers
characterised by low confidence, symptoms of depression and high stress which improve over time for the
majority of mothers. The KPCS at 2 months postpartum was the strongest predictor of the measures used. Further
research is needed to identify parents who are struggling, especially for health professionals’ whose role is to
support parents in their parenthood the first period after birth.
Authors
About this publication
Published in
Sexual & Reproductive Healthcare