A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Antecedents of maternal pregnancy-related anxiety trajectories: The FinnBrain birth cohort study




AuthorsHuizink Anja C., Lammassaari Dora, Nolvi Saara, Korja Riikka, Karlsson Linnea, Karlsson Hasse, Kataja Eeva Leena

PublisherWiley

Publishing placeHoboken

Publication year2024

JournalActa Psychiatrica Scandinavica

Journal name in sourceACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA

Journal acronymACTA PSYCHIAT SCAND

Volume150

Issue5

First page 334

Last page343

Number of pages10

ISSN0001-690X

eISSN1600-0447

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/acps.13671

Web address https://doi.org/10.1111/acps.13671

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/387306373


Abstract

Objective: Little is known about the normative courses of pregnancy-related anxiety throughout pregnancy and their antecedents. We examined in a large scale pregnancy cohort which potentially distinct trajectories of pregnancy-related anxiety across pregnancy can be identified, and which factors predict these trajectories.

Methods: A general sample of pregnant women (n = 2928) from the FinnBrain Birth Cohort participated in this study. Several questionnaires were filled in at 14, 24, and 34 weeks of gestation, including the pregnancy-related anxiety questionnaire-revised as main outcome. Latent Growth Mixture Modeling was applied to identify the trajectories of pregnancy-related anxiety across pregnancy, and t-tests and chi-quare tests were conducted to find antecedents of these trajectories.

Results: Two distinct trajectories were identified: (1) a low symptoms group, N = 2594 (88.6%), with lower and slightly increasing levels of pregnancy-related anxiety (2) a moderately-high symptoms group, N = 334 (11.4%) reported higher and slightly decreasing levels of anxiety. Correlates of the moderately-high anxious group included a lower monthly income, drinking alcohol or smoking in early pregnancy, more daily hassles and less joy, more early life adversities, younger age, primiparity, single parenthood, using depression medication, and having higher scores on depression and general anxiety.

Conclusions: Although the majority of pregnant women fall within a low risk trajectory of pregnancy-related anxiety, another group with consistently higher levels of pregnancy anxiety throughout pregnancy may need more clinical attention, as their high pregnancy-related anxiety scores may indicate a risk profile that includes a variety of general and more pregnancy-specific risk factors, which together can negatively affect fetal and infant development and behavior.


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Last updated on 2025-24-03 at 12:33