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Background: Decreased maternal mental health leads to difficulties for the mother herself and for her family life. In Germany, inpatient mother-/father-child preventive and rehabilitation clinics are addressing these parental health problems. Further analysis, however, is needed in order to better understand the origins of impaired parental health and to improve the interventions. The present study focuses on maternal mental health and its association with strains related to mothers' parental role, their partnership, and satisfaction with various aspects of life.
Methods: For this cross-sectional study data from the relationship and family panel pairfam, wave 11, were used. Mothers in a cohabiting relationship with at least one child living in their household were examined. T-tests were employed to compare mentally stressed and mentally not stressed mothers in terms of (1) partnership (disagreements with partner, own destructive conflict behaviour, partner support and recognition), (2) parental competence, (unspecific strain, missing autonomy, and overprotectiveness in the parental role), and (3) satisfaction with work-life balance, leisure activities, friends and social contacts, and family. Multiple linear regression analysis was conducted, with the mental health composite scale of the Short Form 12 (Version 2.0) Health Survey as the dependent variable, and the previously mentioned variables as independent variables.
Results: Among 1,441 mothers in partnership, 153 (10.6%) were mentally stressed. Mean comparisons indicated significantly poorer values for mentally stressed mothers across all variables. The results of the linear regression model demonstrated a correlation between maternal mental health and disagreements with the partner (B=-1.318, p =.002), own destructive conflict behaviour (B=-1.232, p =.002), parental competence (B = 1.606, p <.001), unspecific strain (B=-1.402, p <.001), missing autonomy (B=-0.732, p =.030), overprotectiveness (B=-1.015, p <.001), and satisfaction with work-life balance (B=-2.537, p =.003), and family (B = 0.432, p =.029).
Conclusions: The findings of this study are consistent with the existing literature, indicating that parental role has the strongest connection with maternal stress. Additionally, novel findings have been identified, including the significant associations of partnership conflict and satisfaction with work-life balance and maternal mental health.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12905-025-03933-7 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Hum Factors
September 2025
Department of Community Health Systems, University of California, San Francisco, School of Nursing, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic forced the world to quarantine to slow the rate of transmission, causing communities to transition into virtual spaces. Asian American and Pacific Islander communities faced the additional challenge of discrimination that stemmed from racist and xenophobic rhetoric in the media. Limited data exist on technology use among Asian American and Pacific Islander adults during the height of the COVID-19 shelter-in-place period and its effect on their physical and mental health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Sch Nurs
September 2025
Indiana University School of Nursing, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
To provide foundational information for the development of a training program to prepare school nurses to deliver a mental health focused SBIRT (Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral to Treatment) approach, this study aimed to describe how school nurses perceive their role in addressing student mental health concerns and determine if these perceptions align with the components of SBIRT. We used content analysis to summarize open-ended survey responses of 38 school nurses to the question "What role do school nurses play in addressing student mental health?" Findings revealed 19 responses aligned with at least one component of SBIRT, one aligned with all three, and 30 focused mainly on forming trusting relationships with students. We conclude school nurses do not implement SBIRT in a systematic way but view its components as consistent with their role.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA
September 2025
McLean Hospital, Belmont, Massachusetts.
JAMA Psychiatry
September 2025
School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Importance: Cannabis is the most commonly used illicit drug, with 10% to 30% of regular users developing cannabis use disorder (CUD), a condition linked to altered hippocampal integrity. Evidence suggests high-intensity interval training (HIIT) enhances hippocampal structure and function, with this form of physical exercise potentially mitigating CUD-related cognitive and mental health impairments.
Objective: To determine the impact of a 12-week HIIT intervention on hippocampal integrity (ie, structure, connectivity, biochemistry) compared with 12 weeks of strength and resistance (SR) training in CUD.