<p>Depressiveness among mothers who seek antenatal care at Bengaluru’s government hospitals increases the risk of infant obesity and stunting, researchers have highlighted in a new paper.</p>.<p>The MAASTHI cohort study estimated depressiveness among mothers at Bengaluru’s public health facilities — assessed within 48 hours of the child’s birth — at 31.8 per cent. Infants born to depressive mothers at birth had 3.9 times higher odds of having a larger waist circumference and 1.9 times higher odds of having a larger sum of skinfold thickness when compared with infants born to non-depressive mothers. The researchers also found that these infants had 1.7 times higher odds of stunting at the age of one year.</p>.<p>The team enrolled 4,829 women pregnant between 14 and 32 weeks — from April 2016 to December 2019 — and followed them up at public health facilities for one year after birth. At-birth follow-ups were completed for 2,647 of them and details of 1,135 infants and mothers who completed the year-long assessment were used. The findings are published in the Journal of Psychosomatic Research.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sunday-herald/sunday-herald-melange/the-red-flags-of-baby-blues-1080057.html" target="_blank">The red flags of baby blues</a></strong></p>.<p>MAASTHI (Maternal Antecedents of Adiposity and Studying the Transgenerational role of Hyperglycemia and Insulin) analyses psychosocial stress during the peripartum period in predicting chronic disease risks.</p>.<p>Though 31.8 per cent indicates lower than standard prevalence of maternal depressiveness in India (50 per cent-60 per cent), the researchers said the burden at tertiary hospitals is sometimes “mistaken” as prevalence.</p>.<p>Giridhara R Babu, professor and head, life-course epidemiology, Indian Institute of Public Health (IIPH), and corresponding author, said the existing estimates are not always a “true representation” of the population prevalence because the tertiary centres often treat only patients with already referred conditions.</p>.<p>“One in three women who deliver at government facilities has depressive symptoms. This cannot be characterised as a small burden. Our estimates are based on a cohort study, which follows up on a group of women, and is not a cross-sectional assessment,” he told <em>DH</em>.</p>.<p>Prafulla Shriyan from IIPH; Sonalini Khetrapal, senior specialist–Asian Development Bank, Philippines; and Onno C P van Schayck from Care and Public Health Research Institute, Maastricht University, the Netherlands, are the other researchers.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><strong>Disrupted caregiving</strong></p>.<p>The paper factors in the adverse effects of depressiveness on caregiving practices that include termination of breastfeeding which, in turn, could lead to early initiation to high-fat, high-sugar foods.</p>.<p>The researchers proposed larger studies that cover private facilities and recommended specialised treatment at primary health care centres (PHCs) for pregnant women and new mothers with depressive symptoms.</p>
<p>Depressiveness among mothers who seek antenatal care at Bengaluru’s government hospitals increases the risk of infant obesity and stunting, researchers have highlighted in a new paper.</p>.<p>The MAASTHI cohort study estimated depressiveness among mothers at Bengaluru’s public health facilities — assessed within 48 hours of the child’s birth — at 31.8 per cent. Infants born to depressive mothers at birth had 3.9 times higher odds of having a larger waist circumference and 1.9 times higher odds of having a larger sum of skinfold thickness when compared with infants born to non-depressive mothers. The researchers also found that these infants had 1.7 times higher odds of stunting at the age of one year.</p>.<p>The team enrolled 4,829 women pregnant between 14 and 32 weeks — from April 2016 to December 2019 — and followed them up at public health facilities for one year after birth. At-birth follow-ups were completed for 2,647 of them and details of 1,135 infants and mothers who completed the year-long assessment were used. The findings are published in the Journal of Psychosomatic Research.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sunday-herald/sunday-herald-melange/the-red-flags-of-baby-blues-1080057.html" target="_blank">The red flags of baby blues</a></strong></p>.<p>MAASTHI (Maternal Antecedents of Adiposity and Studying the Transgenerational role of Hyperglycemia and Insulin) analyses psychosocial stress during the peripartum period in predicting chronic disease risks.</p>.<p>Though 31.8 per cent indicates lower than standard prevalence of maternal depressiveness in India (50 per cent-60 per cent), the researchers said the burden at tertiary hospitals is sometimes “mistaken” as prevalence.</p>.<p>Giridhara R Babu, professor and head, life-course epidemiology, Indian Institute of Public Health (IIPH), and corresponding author, said the existing estimates are not always a “true representation” of the population prevalence because the tertiary centres often treat only patients with already referred conditions.</p>.<p>“One in three women who deliver at government facilities has depressive symptoms. This cannot be characterised as a small burden. Our estimates are based on a cohort study, which follows up on a group of women, and is not a cross-sectional assessment,” he told <em>DH</em>.</p>.<p>Prafulla Shriyan from IIPH; Sonalini Khetrapal, senior specialist–Asian Development Bank, Philippines; and Onno C P van Schayck from Care and Public Health Research Institute, Maastricht University, the Netherlands, are the other researchers.</p>.<p class="CrossHead"><strong>Disrupted caregiving</strong></p>.<p>The paper factors in the adverse effects of depressiveness on caregiving practices that include termination of breastfeeding which, in turn, could lead to early initiation to high-fat, high-sugar foods.</p>.<p>The researchers proposed larger studies that cover private facilities and recommended specialised treatment at primary health care centres (PHCs) for pregnant women and new mothers with depressive symptoms.</p>