Pregnancy and the postpartum period represent a time of profound transformation for women, characterized by significant psychological, neurobiological, social, and relational changes, as well as an increased vulnerability to the onset of mental health disorders. In this context, several social factors, both individual and contextual, can influence women’s mental health and contribute to inequalities in health outcomes. Social determinants of perinatal maternal mental health include, for instance, experiences of discrimination, characteristics of the geographical area of residence and socio-economic status. These factors can impact health through various mechanisms, such as access to healthcare, availability of both material and psychological resources, and exposure to stressful life events. The aim of the present thesis is to explore the relationship between social determinants and perinatal maternal mental health. In particular, it explores the association between socioeconomic status, measured through annual household income, level of education, and employment status, and maternal symptoms of anxiety and depression during pregnancy and the first year postpartum.
La gravidanza e il post partum costituiscono un periodo di profonda trasformazione per la donna, caratterizzato da molteplici cambiamenti sul piano psicologico, neurobiologico, sociale e relazionale e da un’aumentata vulnerabilità rispetto all’insorgenza di psicopatologia. In questo contesto, numerosi fattori sociali, sia individuali che contestuali, possono influenzare la salute mentale della donna e contribuire alle disuguaglianze osservate negli esiti di salute. Tra le determinanti sociali della salute mentale materna perinatale vi sono, ad esempio, la discriminazione, le peculiarità dell’area geografica di residenza e lo status socioeconomico. Tali fattori possono intervenire sullo stato di salute attraverso molteplici meccanismi, tra cui l’accesso alle cure, la disponibilità di risorse, sia materiali che psicologiche, e l’esposizione a eventi stressanti. Lo scopo del presente lavoro di tesi è quello di approfondire la relazione tra determinanti sociali e salute mentale materna perinatale. Nello specifico, è indagata la relazione tra lo status socioeconomico, operazionalizzato attraverso il reddito familiare annuo, il livello di istruzione e lo stato occupazionale della donna, e la sintomatologia ansiosa e depressiva materna durante la gravidanza e nel primo anno dopo il parto.
Determinanti sociali e salute mentale materna nel periodo perinatale: uno studio longitudinale
CESARINI, CHIARA
2024/2025
Abstract
Pregnancy and the postpartum period represent a time of profound transformation for women, characterized by significant psychological, neurobiological, social, and relational changes, as well as an increased vulnerability to the onset of mental health disorders. In this context, several social factors, both individual and contextual, can influence women’s mental health and contribute to inequalities in health outcomes. Social determinants of perinatal maternal mental health include, for instance, experiences of discrimination, characteristics of the geographical area of residence and socio-economic status. These factors can impact health through various mechanisms, such as access to healthcare, availability of both material and psychological resources, and exposure to stressful life events. The aim of the present thesis is to explore the relationship between social determinants and perinatal maternal mental health. In particular, it explores the association between socioeconomic status, measured through annual household income, level of education, and employment status, and maternal symptoms of anxiety and depression during pregnancy and the first year postpartum.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Cesarini_Chiara.pdf
accesso aperto
Dimensione
1.57 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.57 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
The text of this website © Università degli studi di Padova. Full Text are published under a non-exclusive license. Metadata are under a CC0 License
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/88752