Low Vitamin D Concentration Is Associated with Increased Depression Risk in Adults 20–44 Years Old, an NHANES 2007–2018 Data Analysis with a Focus on Perinatal and Breastfeeding Status

Author:

Hollinshead Victoria Rose Barri Benters1ORCID,Piaskowski Julia L.2,Chen Yimin3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MD/MPH Program, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, IL 62702, USA

2. College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844, USA

3. Margaret Ritchie School of Family and Consumer Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844, USA

Abstract

The objective was to investigate associations of serum vitamin D concentration with depressive symptoms and assess the impact that vitamin D concentration has on the occurrence of depressive symptoms in 20–44-year-old pregnant women, postpartum women, non-pp women (non-pregnant/postpartum women), and men, including a separate subgroup analysis of postpartum breastfeeding and non-breastfeeding women. The study populations were selected from the 2007–2018 NHANES public data. Subjective interview data and objective laboratory data including depressive symptoms, serum vitamin D concentration, nutrient intake, and demographic information were utilized. Two diet patterns were created using principal component analysis, and a Bayesian multinomial model was fit to predict the depression outcomes for each subpopulation. The estimates for the log vitamin D slope parameter were negative for all cohorts; as vitamin D increased, the probability of having no depression increased, while the probability of depression decreased. The pregnant cohort had the steepest vitamin D slope, followed by postpartum women, then non-pp women and men. Higher vitamin D concentration had more impact on decreasing depression risk in pregnant and postpartum women compared to non-pp women and men. Among postpartum women, higher vitamin D concentration had a greater influence on decreasing breastfeeding women’s depression risk than non-breastfeeding women.

Funder

Southern Illinois University School of Medicine’s Clinical

Research Experience (CARE) program

University of Idaho’s College of Agricultural

Life Sciences

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference62 articles.

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4. The effect of postpartum depression and current mental health problems of the mother on child behaviour at eight years;Canals;Matern. Child Health J.,2017

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