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Childcare Instability and Maternal Depressive Symptoms: Exploring New Avenues for Supporting Maternal Mental Health.
Academic Pediatrics 2018 May 30
OBJECTIVE: We investigated links between childcare experiences-specifically, care instability and mothers' perceptions of care access-and maternal depressive symptoms in an effort to illuminate policy-amenable mechanisms through which childcare experiences can support maternal mental health.
METHODS: Data were taken from the nationally representative Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort. We used regression models with lagged dependent variables to estimate associations between aspects of childcare instability and perceptions of care availability and maternal depressive symptoms. We did so on the full sample and then on subgroups of mothers for whom childcare instability may be especially distressing: mothers who are low income, working, single, or non-native speakers of English.
RESULTS: Childcare instability-length in months in the longest arrangement and number of arrangements-was not associated with maternal depressive symptoms. However, mothers' perceptions of having good choices for care were associated with a reduced likelihood of clinical depressive symptoms, even after controlling for prior depressive symptoms and concurrent parenting stress; this latter association was observed both in the full sample (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 0.77; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.63-0.96) and among subgroups of employed mothers (AOR = 0.71; CI = 0.57-0.87) and single mothers (AOR = 0.72; CI = 0.52-0.99).
CONCLUSIONS: Although dimensions of care instability did not associate with maternal depressive symptoms, mothers' perceptions of available care options did. If replicated, findings would highlight a previously unconsidered avenue-increasing care accessibility and awareness of available options-for promoting maternal mental health in a population likely to experience depression but unlikely to be treated.
METHODS: Data were taken from the nationally representative Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort. We used regression models with lagged dependent variables to estimate associations between aspects of childcare instability and perceptions of care availability and maternal depressive symptoms. We did so on the full sample and then on subgroups of mothers for whom childcare instability may be especially distressing: mothers who are low income, working, single, or non-native speakers of English.
RESULTS: Childcare instability-length in months in the longest arrangement and number of arrangements-was not associated with maternal depressive symptoms. However, mothers' perceptions of having good choices for care were associated with a reduced likelihood of clinical depressive symptoms, even after controlling for prior depressive symptoms and concurrent parenting stress; this latter association was observed both in the full sample (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 0.77; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.63-0.96) and among subgroups of employed mothers (AOR = 0.71; CI = 0.57-0.87) and single mothers (AOR = 0.72; CI = 0.52-0.99).
CONCLUSIONS: Although dimensions of care instability did not associate with maternal depressive symptoms, mothers' perceptions of available care options did. If replicated, findings would highlight a previously unconsidered avenue-increasing care accessibility and awareness of available options-for promoting maternal mental health in a population likely to experience depression but unlikely to be treated.
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