The British Journal of Psychiatry (2006) 188: 284-285. doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.105.012096
© 2006 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Maternal psychological morbidity and low birth weight in India
VIKRAM PATEL, MRCPsych, PhD
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
MARTIN PRINCE, MRCPsych, MD
Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK
Correspondence:
Dr Vikram Patel, NPHIRU, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine,
Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT, UK. Fax: +44 (0)207 958 8111; e-mail:
Vikram.patel{at}lshtm.ac.uk
Declaration of interest None. Funding detailed in
Acknowledgements.
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ABSTRACT
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Depression following childbirth is associated with poor child growth in
developing countries. We describe the association between psychological
morbidity during pregnancy and low birth weight (<2.5 kg). A cohort of 270
mothers was recruited from a district hospitalin Goa, India; all mothers were
interviewed with a screening questionnaire for psychological morbidity. Babies
of 250 mothers were reviewed at birth to measure their weight. Excluding 5
premature babies, we found that maternal psychological morbidity was
independently associated with low birth weight (odds ratio 1.44, 95% CI
1.02.07). We conclude that maternal psychological morbidity has an
adverse impact on foetal growth.
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INTRODUCTION
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Maternal psychological morbidity in the postnatal period is associated with
failure to thrive and malnutrition in the first year of life in developing
countries (Patel et al,
2004a). The majority of mothers who are depressed
postnatally also show significant psychological morbidity in the antenatal
period (Patel et al,
2004a). It is plausible that the adverse impact of
maternal depression on infant growth may begin during the antenatal period,
leading to low birth weight. A cohort study from Pakistan reported that babies
of mothers who were depressed during the third trimester of pregnancy were 2.1
times (95% CI 1.13.3) more likely to have a low birth weight (<2.5
kg) than babies of other mothers (Rahman
et al, 2004). We present an analysis of another cohort
study, from India, which aimed to describe the risk factors for depression in
the postnatal period (Patel et al,
2002). We used the data from that study to test the hypothesis
that psychological morbidity in the third trimester is associated with low
birth weight.
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METHOD
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Details of the recruitment have been reported by Patel et al
(2002). The study took place in
the antenatal clinic of the Asilo Hospital, a district hospital in the town of
Mapusa, Goa, in 19992000. Consecutive women attending the
hospitals antenatal clinic who were more than 30 weeks pregnant were
eligible to participate. Women who were transient visitors to the hospital
clinic or who did not speak a study language were excluded. At recruitment,
participants were interviewed with the Konkani language version of the General
Health Questionnaire (GHQ; Patel et
al, 1998). This 12-item questionnaire is a measure of
psychological health. The Konkani version has been developed, validated and
used in Goa (Patel et al,
1998). An interview elicited data on other risk factors for
postnatal depression: maternal age, parental education, economic deprivation
(paternal income, being in debt), antenatal medical problems, whether the
pregnancy was planned, and obstetric factors (number of pregnancies). The
outcome was the weight of the newborn, routinely recorded immediately after
birth in the labour room. The weight was recorded in kilogrammes up to two
decimal places, and then categorised into a dichotomous outcome: low birth
weight (<2.5 kg) or normal birth weight. Written or verbal witnessed (by a
hospital nurse) informed consent was obtained from all participants.
The analysis aimed to test for a linear association between maternal
psychological morbidity, categorised as quartiles of GHQ scores, and low birth
weight in term babies; premature babies (<37 weeks) were therefore
excluded. Unadjusted odds ratios were calculated for each risk factor and
multiple logistic regression was used to adjust for potential confounding
effects.
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RESULTS
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In total, 297 mothers were eligible to participate; 27 mothers (9.1%)
refused, leaving a sample of 270 mothers with an average gestation at
recruitment of 34 weeks. Their average age was 26 years (range 1840).
All but one were married; 114 (42.2%) were primigravida. Less than 10% of the
mothers were in full-time employment. Fathers had marginally more years of
formal education than their wives (mean 7.5 years v. 6.4 years). The
average monthly income for fathers was Rs 2140 (US$50). Outcome data were
available for 250 babies (92.6%). Five babies were premature and hence
excluded from the analysis, leaving 245 eligible motherbaby dyads. Of
these, 26 babies (10.6%) were of low birth weight.
In bivariate analyses there were non-significant trends for low birth
weight to be associated with older maternal age, lower paternal income and
lower levels of maternal and paternal education. The only significant
association was that between GHQ score and low birth weight
(Table 1), with an odds ratio
(OR) of 1.44 (95% CI 1.002.07) for each quartile increase in GHQ score.
Exploratory analysis revealed that the association was non-linear, with the
excess risk concentrated in the highest quarter of the GHQ distribution: first
quarter, OR=1; second quarter, OR=0.43 (95% CI 0.092.16); third
quarter, OR=0.74, (95% CI 0.212.67); fourth quarter, OR=2.51 (95% CI
0.946.74). In subsequent multivariate analyses the effect of adjusting
incrementally for the possible confounders was observed for its impact on the
linear association with GHQ score (Table
1). There was little evidence of confounding.
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Table 1 Association between maternal General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) score
in the last trimester of pregnancy and low birth weight
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DISCUSSION
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Babies of mothers who had high scores on the GHQ, indicating probable
psychological morbidity, were significantly more likely to be of low birth
weight, even after adjustment for maternal age, maternal and paternal
education and paternal income. We acknowledge the limitations of this study:
this is a secondary analysis of a data-set and we do not have information on
all possible confounders and mediating variables, notably maternal nutritional
status, maternal stature and the actual gestational period. In addition,
maternal substance misuse such as smoking may be an important confounder
(Nordentoft et al,
1996); however, smoking is very uncommon among women in our study
population. Our exposure data were based on a screening questionnaire rather
than a diagnostic interview, and there might be a differential effect of
maternal anxiety and depression on foetal growth. Further systematic,
longitudinal, hypothesis-driven research, with a priori measures of
potential confounders and of plausible factors that lie on the causal pathway
between psychological morbidity and low birth weight, are needed to confirm
our findings. However, the associations we have reported replicate those of
the recent study from Pakistan, and suggest that psychological morbidity in
the antenatal period has a role in the causation of low birth weight
(Rahman et al, 2004).
Evidence from the developed world has been more mixed, with some negative
reports (Andersson et al,
2004) and some evidence that the association may only be apparent
under circumstances of socio-economic adversity
(Orr et al, 2002). The
exact mechanisms are unclear, but may relate to poor self-care in women who
are psychologically unwell (for example poor appetite), lesser access to
antenatal services, or failure to obtain treatment for anaemia (endemic in the
region).
The findings of our analysis, combined with the compelling evidence linking
post-natal depression and infant malnutrition
(Patel et al,
2004a), indicate the significance of psychological
morbidity in mothers as a common, treatable and almost entirely
ignored risk factor for impaired foetal and infant growth. This
evidence has been generated from a region with half the worlds
malnourished children. Several recent trials (for review see
Patel et al,
2004b) have shown that common mental disorders can be
treated in developing countries using locally available and affordable
interventions. We recommend that the detection and effective management of
psychological disorders in pregnancy and the postnatal period should be
considered as one of the most important maternal and child health priorities
in the region.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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The study was supported by a grant from the MacArthur Foundation. We
gratefully acknowledge the contribution of colleagues from Sangath, Goa, to
the data collection.
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REFERENCES
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Andersson, L., Sundstrom-Poromaa, I., Wulff, M., et al
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Received for publication April 10, 2005.
Revision received June 23, 2005.
Accepted for publication July 12, 2005.
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