Author:
Suzumori Nobuhiro,Ebara Takeshi,Tamada Hazuki,Matsuki Taro,Sato Hirotaka,Kato Sayaka,Saitoh Shinji,Kamijima Michihiro,Sugiura-Ogasawara Mayumi,Yamazaki Shin,Ohya Yukihiro,Kishi Reiko,Yaegashi Nobuo,Hashimoto Koichi,Mori Chisato,Ito Shuichi,Yamagata Zentaro,Inadera Hidekuni,Nakayama Takeo,Iso Hiroyasu,Shima Masayuki,Kurozawa Youichi,Suganuma Narufumi,Kusuhara Koichi,Katoh Takahiko,
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Postpartum depression is one of the most commonly experienced psychological disorders for women after childbirth, usually occurring within one year. This study aimed to clarify whether women with delivery with anesthesia, including epidural analgesia, spinal-epidural analgesia, and paracervical block, had a decreased risk of postpartum depression after giving birth in Japan.
Methods
The Japan Environment and Children’s Study (JECS) was a prospective cohort study that enrolled registered fetal records (n = 104,065) in 15 regions nationwide in Japan. Binomial logistic regression analyses were performed to calculate the adjusted odd ratios (aORs) for the association between mode of delivery with or without anesthesia and postpartum depression at one-, six- and twelve-months after childbirth.
Results
At six months after childbirth, vaginal delivery with anesthesia was associated with a higher risk of postpartum depression (aOR: 1.233, 95% confidence interval: 1.079–1.409), compared with vaginal delivery without analgesia. Nevertheless, the risk dropped off one year after delivery. Among the pregnant women who requested delivery with anesthesia, 5.1% had a positive Kessler-6 scale (K6) score for depression before the first trimester (p < 0.001), which was significantly higher than the proportions in the vaginal delivery without analgesia (3.5%).
Conclusions
Our data suggested that the risk of postpartum depression at six months after childbirth tended to be increased after vaginal delivery with anesthesia, compared with vaginal delivery without analgesia. Requests for delivery with anesthesia continue to be relatively uncommon in Japan, and women who make such requests might be more likely to experience postpartum depressive symptoms because of underlying maternal environmental statuses.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Reference28 articles.
1. Salameh KM, Paraparambil VA, Sarfrazul A, Hussain HL, Thyvilayil SS, Mahmoud AS. Effects of labor epidural analgesia on short term neonatal morbidity. Int J Womens Health. 2020;12:59–70.
2. Törnell S, Ekéus C, Hultin M, Håkansson S, Thunberg J, Högberg U. Low Apgar score, neonatal encephalopathy and epidural analgesia during labour: a Swedish registry-based study. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 2015;59(4):486–95.
3. Anim-Somuah M, Smyth RM, Jones L. Epidural versus non-epidural or no analgesia in labour. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011;12:CD000331.
4. Kurakazu M, Umehara N, Nagata C, Yamashita Y, Sato M, Sago H. Delivery mode and maternal and neonatal outcomes of combined spiral-epidural analgesia compared with no analgesia in spontaneous labor: a single-center observational study in Japan. J Obstet Gynaecol Res. 2020;46:425–33.
5. Niwa A, Yoda T. The formation of the myth of motherhood in Japan. Japan Am Wem J. 1993;4:70–82.