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Purpose: Understanding the mechanisms through which poverty influences perinatal depression can provide insight into how to develop interventions to improve maternal mental health. To address this question, we aim to estimate indirect effects of important mediators on the causal relationship between food insecurity and symptoms of postnatal depression.
Methods: We used data from the control arm of the Africa Focus on Intervention Research for Mental health - South Africa (AFFIRM-SA) trial that included pregnant women with perinatal depression. Interventional effects (used for models that may have multiple correlated mediators) were used to decompose the total effect of food insecurity captured at baseline on symptoms of perinatal depression reducing by at least 40% (using the 17-item HDRS instrument - yes/no) at three months after delivery of the baby, into the following indirect effects: number of antenatal visits attended; suicidality at eight months gestation; and levels of social support captured at eight months gestation using the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support.
Results: Food insecurity was associated with a 15% reduced probability of symptoms of depression improving at three months post-delivery (-0·151, bias-corrected 95% CI: - 0.267, -0·032), of which 48% was mediated through reduced levels of social support in women exposed to food insecurity (-0.073: bias-corrected 95% CI: -0.146, -0.029). There was no conclusive evidence to support the mediating effects of attending antenatal visits and suicidality.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that providing social support can help to reduce symptoms of postnatal depression. Future research should explore developing and evaluating a package of care for pregnant women with perinatal depression that improves food security and levels of social support. This research suggests that policy makers and practitioners have a renewed focus on increasing social support systems for women during the perinatal period, especially in cases of food insecurity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00127-025-02986-1 | DOI Listing |
JAMIA Open
October 2025
Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84108, United States.
Objectives: Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a growing public health burden with persistent racial and ethnic disparities. . This study assessed the completeness of social determinants of health (SdoH) data for patients with T2D in Epic Cosmos, a nationwide, cross-institutional electronic health recors (EHR) database.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Lifestyle Med
September 2025
Center for Behavioral Emergency & Addiction Research, McWilliams School of Biomedical Informatics, the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX, USA (ASC, MCT, AL, TCL).
Background: Substance use disorders (SUD) are associated with metabolic dysregulation and nutritional deficiencies. Studies show that incorporating nutrition interventions into treatment may improve physical and psychological health. This study sought to explore dietary and consumer behavior in individuals currently using substances.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Public Health (Berl)
July 2025
Department of Epidemiology, George Washington University (GWU), Washington, DC, USA.
Aim: Patient reported outcomes (PROs) can help to evaluate gaps and areas for improvement along the HIV care continuum. We sought to describe the methodology and processes of a PROs study within the DC Cohort study population, describe the PROs results to date, report on lessons learned, and describe future directions of the research.
Subject And Methods: Each study site recruited participants from the DC Cohort, a longitudinal study on people with HIV, to complete the electronic PROs baseline and annual follow-up surveys, which consisted of previously validated measures of social determinants of health, mental health, substance use, medication adherence, and other related measures.
J Eval Clin Pract
September 2025
St. Luke's Health System, Boise, Idaho, USA.
Introduction: Voucher-based food as medicine programs have become a common method to help reduce the burden of chronic disease. While recent studies find these programs reduce HbA1c, few of these studies included a comparison group.
Objective: This article evaluates the impact of a clinically based voucher program on HbA1c of diabetic patients.
Pest Manag Sci
September 2025
CABI, Nairobi, Kenya.
Background: Crop pests cause substantial crop yield and economic losses, food insecurity, and negative impacts on human health and environment globally. Timely provision of pest risk alerts - that is, the optimum time to intervene against key pests before invasion or establishment - to smallholder farmers on pest management could improve farm performance. However, there is little quantitative evidence testing this hypothesis.
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