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Journal ArticleDOI

Stress, pre-term labour and birth outcomes.

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TLDR
The findings from this study indicate the need for further exploration of the interaction of race and stress in understanding and preventing PTL and low birthweight and the need to examine the role of social support in preventing pre-term birth after an episode of PTL.
Abstract
Stress, pre-term labour and birth outcomes Preliminary studies have suggested that stress may be associated with the onset, treatment and outcomes of pre-term labour; however, a systematic comparison of the stress of women with and without pre-term labour has not been reported. Therefore, the purpose of this exploratory study was to compare the stress (daily hassles and mood states) and birth outcomes of black and white women who experienced pre-term labour (PTL) during pregnancy with those who did not. The convenience sample consisted of 35 pregnant women hospitalized in 1996-1997 for the treatment of PTL (24-35 weeks gestation) and 35 controls matched on age, race, parity, gestational age and method of hospital payment. Women in the PTL group had significantly higher tension-anxiety and depression-dejection on the Profile of Mood States (POMS), lower mean birthweight and mean gestational age, and a higher percentage of babies born <37 weeks and weighing 2500 g or less. Black women in the PTL group and white women in the control group had significantly higher scores on the fatigue sub-scale of the POMS and the work and future security sub-scales of the Daily Hassles Scale. Women in the PTL group whose babies weighed 2500 g or less had significantly higher scores on the health, inner concern and financial responsibility sub-scales of the Daily Hassles Scale. The findings from this study indicate the need for further exploration of the interaction of race and stress in understanding and preventing PTL and low birthweight and the need to examine the role of social support in preventing pre-term birth after an episode of PTL.

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Citations
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Physical and mental health outcomes of prenatal maternal stress in human and animal studies: a review of recent evidence.

TL;DR: The quality of recent evidence for prevailing PNMS theoretical models, namely the biopsychosocial model for adverse pregnancy outcomes and the fetal programming model for chronic diseases are examined.
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Explaining Disproportionately High Rates of Adverse Birth Outcomes among African Americans: The Impact of Stress, Racism, and Related Factors in Pregnancy.

TL;DR: None of the explanations examined has some merit, although none is sufficient to explain ethnic disparities in adverse birth outcomes, and there is a lack of studies examining the impact of such factors jointly and interactively.
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Psychosocial stress in pregnancy and preterm birth: associations and mechanisms.

TL;DR: Subjective perception of stress and pregnancy-related anxiety appeared to be the stress measures most closely associated with PTB, and future research should examine the biological pathways of these different psychosocial stress dimensions and at multiple time points across pregnancy.
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Maternal stress and affect influence fetal neurobehavioral development.

TL;DR: Data provide evidence for proximal effects of maternal psychological functioning on fetal neurobehavior, andfetuses of women who were more affectively intense, appraised their lives as more stressful, and reported more frequent pregnancy-specific hassles were more active across gestation.
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Measuring the ups and downs of pregnancy stress.

TL;DR: Measurement of hassles relative to uplifts may provide the most balanced assessment of pregnancy appraisal and indicate that failure to measure pregnancy-specific stress will underestimate the degree to which pregnant women experience distress and measurement of only the negative aspects of pregnancy will overestimate distress.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing for abuse during pregnancy. Severity and frequency of injuries and associated entry into prenatal care.

TL;DR: A simple clinical assessment screen completed by the health care provider in a private setting and with the male partner absent is as effective as research instruments in identifying abused women.
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TL;DR: Basic Ingredients Getting Started: The Anatomy and Physiology of Clinical Research Conceiving the Research Question Choosing the Study Subjects: Specification, Sampling and Recruitment Planning the Measurements: Precision and Accuracy Getting Ready to Estimate Sample Size: Hypotheses and Underlying Principles Estimating Sample Size and Power: The Nitty-gritty Study Designs
Journal ArticleDOI

The association between prenatal stress and infant birth weight and gestational age at birth: A prospective investigation

TL;DR: Independent of biomedical risk, maternal prenatal stress factors are significantly associated with infant birth weight and with gestational age at birth.
Journal ArticleDOI

The preterm prediction study: Maternal stress is associated with spontaneous preterm birth at less than thirty-five weeks' gestation ☆ ☆☆ ★

TL;DR: In this paper, a 28-item Likert scale was used to assess anxiety, stress, self-esteem, mastery, and depression in 25 to 29 weeks in 2593 gravid women and found that stress was significantly associated with spontaneous preterm birth and low birth weight.
Journal Article

Abuse during pregnancy: effects on maternal complications and birth weight in adult and teenage women.

TL;DR: To determine the incidence of physical and sexual abuse in a sample of adult and teen pregnant women and to determine the effect of abuse on birth weight, a large number of African-American, Hispanic, and white urban female residents were screened for abuse.
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