Anxious Pregnant Mothers are More Likely to Have Smaller Babies
Pittsburgh, PA—A new study published in the journal Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology reveals that anxiety in pregnant women impacts their babies’ size and gestational age. Specifically, women with more severe and chronic anxiety during pregnancy are more likely to have affected babies.
The study took a sample of low-income women, half of whom were African American and the other half Caucasian. The group already had well-known risk factors such as alcohol and cigarette use. The authors demonstrated that the mother’s anxiety during pregnancy impacts birth outcomes over and beyond factors such as drug use, education, and race.
Anxiety during the third trimester predicted women delivering significantly smaller babies. In the first and second trimesters, the effects of anxiety were significant only among those women who had severe anxiety.
Low to moderate levels of anxiety in women during either the first or second trimester did not significantly affect the birth outcomes, but women who are severely anxious during much of their pregnancy should be considered for anxiety-reducing interventions.
“One way to prevent health problems in children and adults is to focus care on the prenatal period,” the authors note. “It is key to pursue further research which addresses interventions to ameliorate the effects that a woman’s trait anxiety has on the development of fetuses.”
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This study is published in the November 2009 issue of Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology and was authored by Shahla M. Hosseini, Minhnoi W. Biglan, Cynthia Larkby, Maria M. Brooks, Michael B. Gorin, and Nancy L. Day.
Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, (Wiley-Blackwell) is an international, peer reviewed journal that crosses the boundaries between epidemiologists, paediatricians, developmental psychologists, environmental specialists, obstetricians, child health specialists and genetic epidemiologists.