Proceeding | OPEN ACCESS

Antenatal worries, anxiety and depression in three prenatal centers in Benin City, Nigeria

Isabel N Aika , Ehigie FO Enato

Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Pharmacy Practice, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Benin, PMB 1154, Benin City, 300001, Nigeria.;

For correspondence:-  Isabel Aika   Email:  isabel.aika@uniben.edu   Tel:  +2348082826539

Published: 28 December 2018

Citation: Aika IN, Enato EF. Antenatal worries, anxiety and depression in three prenatal centers in Benin City, Nigeria. J Sci Pract Pharm 2018; 5(1):199-200 doi: 10.47227/jsppharm.v5i1.05

© 2018 The author(s).
This is an Open Access article that uses a funding model which does not charge readers or their institutions for access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0). This license requires that reusers give credit to the creator. It allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, for noncommercial purposes only. .

Abstract

Purpose: To determine the prevalence of worries, anxiety and depression in pregnancy and their risk factors.

Methods: A cross-sectional study among 540 antenatal women in three antenatal clinics in Benin City using validated questionnaire.

Results: About half (44.4%) of the participants had high level of worries. Major concerns for worries were about giving birth 122(24.3%) and fear of something being wrong with their babies 95(19.5%). Depressive symptoms were found in 161 (29.8%) of participants.

Conclusion: Prevalence of antenatal worries, anxiety and depression in this study is of concern.

Keywords: Antenatal, worries, anxiety, depression, antidepressants

Introduction

Worries, anxiety and depression are not uncommon in pregnancy.  They are implicated in antenatal and postnatal depression and negative outcomes for the feotus [1]. Little attention is paid to excessive worries and symptoms of anxiety and depression in pregnancy as they are often misconstrued by healthcare providers, and may wrongly be linked to hormonal and physical changes that occur during pregnancy. This has resulted in under diagnosis of antenatal depression and treatment with either supportive therapy or use of antidepressants.

Aim/Objectives

The objective of this study is to determine the prevalence of worries, anxiety and depression in pregnancy and their risk factors.          

Methods

This was a cross-sectional study among 540 antenatal women conducted in three antenatal clinics in Benin City. Outcome measures were worries, anxiety and depression using the Cambridge worry Scale (CWS) and the Edinburg Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) respectively. Data were analyzed both descriptively and inferentially with Chi square and Anova using SPPSS version 20 and Graphpad Instat version 3. P-values <0.05 were considered significant.

Results & Discussion

About half (44.4%) of the participants had high level of worries with a mean worry score of 38.13±7.838. A little below three-quarter (70.2%) of women scored between 0-12 on the EPDS, while 16 (29.8%) scored above the cut off (≥ 13) for major depression, with 19 being the highest score, and a total mean score of 10.19±4.934. Half of the study participants scored above 4 in the EPDS anxiety subscale, while 46 (8.5%) scored above 4 in the depression subscale. Half (52.2%) of the respondents were anxious or worried for no good reason, 244 (48.8%) felt unhappy that they had difficulty sleeping, 200 (42%) were scared or panicky for no good reasons, 106 (23.4%) felt sad or miserable and 40 (8.2%) of respondents sometimes had thoughts of harming themselves in the past seven days.

 

Figures from this study are similar to that conducted among Greek population where about 44% of women had high anxiety score, while 32.7% had significant depression score using the Center for Epidemiological Scale for Depression [2]. Anxiety has been linked to sleep deprivation. More women reported having difficulty in sleeping in this study compared to 20.6% of pregnant women reported in previous study. This symptom has been linked to childbirth fear which appeared to be part of a complex picture of women’s emotional experiences during pregnancy with a positive correlation with anxiety [3].  It is said that depression among pregnant women is higher in low income countries/populations, studies from Australia and the United states reported 16.9% and 9% respectively of antenatal depression; while in a high-risk population in Canada 21% was reported, however, in South Africa, 38.5% was reported [4,5].  About one in eight pregnant women had thought of self-harm in the prior seven days in this study. This is higher than 2.6% reported among participants in the study in Canada and 38.3% from that conducted in South Africa [4].

 

In this study, major concern for worries were about giving birth 122(24.3%), fear of something being wrong with their babies 95(19.5%), employment problems 82(17%), and coping with the baby after delivery 80(16.3%). These were rated more than worries about money problems 73(15.6%), their own health 55(11.8%) and possibility of miscarriage 50(10.3%). Depressive symptoms were found in 161 (29.8%) of participants, with a total mean score of 10.19±4.934. about half (47.6%) of the participants had score ≥4 in the anxiety subscale of the EPDS, while 40(8.2%) had thoughts of harming themselves in the past seven days. None of the socio-demographic factors were associated with worries. Women who were younger than 24 years and older than 45 years had higher scores (p=0.02), those of less than 12 years of education (p=0.003), and those who earned less than ?20,000 or were not employed were more depressed than other respondents (p=0.02). Higher education is believed to be protective against depression, although a few studies do not agree with this relationship [5,6]. Some studies report that younger pregnant women experience more depression, while those in the second or third trimester of pregnancy are more at risk [4,7]. This study however found that older women above 45 years also had significant depression, but did not find any relationship with the stage of pregnancy.

Conclusion

Prevalence of antenatal worries, anxiety and depression in this study is of concern. Routine screening of antenatal patients is essential to identify women that need non-drug therapy or antidepressant in order to prevent negative effects of these mental states.

References

  1. Garcia Rico, Rodriguez SMU, Diez MIM. Analysis of the relationship between maternal anxiety and pregnancy. Journal of Obstet and Gynecol 2010; 53(7):273-279
  2. Gourounti K, Anagnostopoulos F, Lykeridou K, Griva F, Vaslamatzis G. “Prevalence of women’s worries, anxiety and depression during pregnancy in a public hospital setting in Greece”, Clinical and Experimental Obstet and Gynaecol 2013;40(5):581-583
  3. Wendy AH, Yvonne LH, Elaine MC, et al. Childbirth fear, anxiety, fatigue and sleep deprivation in pregnant women. JOGNN 2009;.38(5):567-576
  4. Bowen A, Brown R, Maslany G, Muhajarine N. Anxiety in a socially High risk sample of pregnant women in Canada. The Canadian J of Psych 2008;55:7
  5. Manikkam L and Burns JK. Antenatal depression and its risk factors: An urban prevalence study in Kwazulu-Natal. The South African Medical Journal 2012;102(12):940-944
  6. Eisimai O, Fatoye F, Vidal O, Momoh R. Antepartum anxiety and depressive symptoms: A study of Nigerian women during the three trimesters of pregnancy. J Obstet and Gynaecol 2008; 28:202-203
  7. Bennette, H.A., Einarson, A., Taddion, A., Koren, G. and Einarson, T.R. Prevalence of depression during pregnancy: systematic review. Obstet and Gynaecol 2004;103:698-709.

 

 

 

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