Academic literature on the topic 'Motherhood. First-born children. Postpartum depression'

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Journal articles on the topic "Motherhood. First-born children. Postpartum depression"

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Ermolova, T. V., T. V. Ivolina, O. V. Dedova, and A. V. Litvinov. "The problem of dysfunctional motherhood in the latest foreign researches." Современная зарубежная психология 8, no. 4 (2019): 25–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.17759/jmfp.2019080403.

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The article analyzes updated foreign empirical developments on the problem of early dysfunctional motherhood. The article is based on the idea of dysfunctional motherhood as a historically evolving psychological phenomenon with multiple risk factors for the health of the child in the first years of life. In view of the discreteness of the evidence, the authors confined their analysis to the diversity of internal and external causes of early deviant motherhood. These are the environmental and biological (genetic) prerequisites of the "hidden" maternal coldness. The last were examined with the h
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Rosander, Michael, Anita Berlin, Karin Forslund Frykedal, and Mia Barimani. "Maternal depression symptoms during the first 21 months after giving birth." Scandinavian Journal of Public Health, December 14, 2020, 140349482097796. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1403494820977969.

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Aims: The first year after childbirth involves a major transition for women, which can accentuate inadequacies and feelings of powerlessness, making them vulnerable to depression. The aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence and frequency of maternal postpartum depressive symptoms at different times after giving birth (0–21 months). Methods: Data were collected cross-sectionally using a web questionnaire containing the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS). A total of 888 mothers with children in the age range 0–21 months responded. Results: The results showed different levels
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Ladd, Walker. ""Born Out of Fear": A Grounded Theory Study of the Stigma of Bipolar Disorder for New Mothers." Qualitative Report, September 10, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.46743/2160-3715/2018.3382.

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Childbirth is an established trigger for the onset of bipolar disorders (BD) in the postpartum period, causing significant pathology and disability. Research has shown that the stigma of mental illness for new mothers is a powerful obstacle to care, preventing women from accessing critical treatment and social support. However, the majority of research has examined the relationship between the stigma and postpartum depression, leaving a gap in knowledge regarding stigma and postpartum bipolar disorder. The problem addressed in this grounded theory study was the lack of knowledge regarding the
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Motherhood. First-born children. Postpartum depression"

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Elwood, Edith Lynnette Pratt. "Identity negotiation and first birth : a study of social process /." Digital version accessible at:, 1999. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/main.

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Book chapters on the topic "Motherhood. First-born children. Postpartum depression"

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Waters, Cerith S., and Susan Pawlby. "Young motherhood, perinatal depression, and children’s development." In Perinatal Psychiatry. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199676859.003.0020.

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The aim of this chapter is to examine young women’s experience of mental health problems during the perinatal period. We shall argue that women who were young at the time of their transition to parenthood are at elevated risk for perinatal depression, in their first and subsequent pregnancies. Evidence for the impact of perinatal depression on children’s development will be outlined, and we propose that the elevated rates of mental health problems among young mothers may partly account for the increased prevalence of adverse outcomes often seen among their children. However, for these young women and their offspring, the impact of perinatal depression may be compounded by many other social, psychological, and biological risk factors, and young women’s circumstances may exacerbate their own and their children’s difficulties. Therefore any clinical strategies regarding the identification and treatment of depression during the antenatal and postnatal months may need to take into account the age of women, with women bearing children earlier and later than the average presenting different challenges for health professionals. Across the industrialized nations the demographics of parenthood are changing, with both men and women first becoming parents at increasingly older ages (Bosch 1998; Martin et al. 2005; Ventura et al. 2001). In the UK for example, the average maternal age at first birth in 1971 was 23.7 years, compared to the present figure of 29.5 years (ONS 2012). Correspondingly, over the last four decades, birth rates for women aged 30 and over have increased extensively, whilst those for women in their teenage years and early twenties have declined (ONS 2012, 2007). Since the 1970s, the proportion of children born to women aged 20–24 in the UK has been decreasing, with women aged 30–34 years now displaying the highest birth rates (ONS 2010). These changes in the demography of parenthood are not confined to the UK with similar trends toward delayed first births observed across Western Europe (Ventura et al. 2001), the United States (Mirowsky 2002), New Zealand (Woodward et al. 2006) and Australia (Barnes 2003). Thus, a transition to parenthood during adolescence and the early 20s is non-normative for Western women, and the implications of this ‘off-time’ transition (Elder 1997, 1998) for the mother’s and the child’s mental health warrants attention.
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