Reimagining Maternal Resilience: Incorporating the Socioecological Framework, Lifecourse Theory, and Weathering Hypothesis

Women of color are at least twice as likely as non-Hispanic White women to die during the perinatal period or deliver infants who are low birthweight, preterm, or die within the first year of life. Maternal stress before and during pregnancy is associated with adverse obstetric outcomes. A growing b...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American psychologist 2024-11, Vol.79 (8), p.1025-1035
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description Women of color are at least twice as likely as non-Hispanic White women to die during the perinatal period or deliver infants who are low birthweight, preterm, or die within the first year of life. Maternal stress before and during pregnancy is associated with adverse obstetric outcomes. A growing body of literature has explored maternal resilience as protective factors contributing to healthy maternal and child health (MCH) outcomes. However, several gaps exist in how this construct has been conceptualized and operationalized. First, extant research has primarily conceptualized maternal resilience as individual attributes that enable women to "bounce back" after facing adversity during pregnancy, thereby failing to incorporate the broader systemic and environmental factors that contribute to chronic stress, particularly among vulnerable groups. Second, the literature has largely neglected to examine resilience in relation to maternal stress, therefore not acknowledging that women who experience greater stress will likely require more resources. Third, though resilience has been investigated at discrete life stages, longitudinal research has not been conducted to explore how it develops over the lifecourse. This article critically evaluates the resilience literature, expands upon the gaps described, and proposes a conceptual framework that reimagines material resilience using three population health theories, including Bronfenbrenner's socioecological framework, Elder's lifecourse theory, and Geronimus' weathering hypothesis. The proposed framework will inform future research that examines the development of multilevel resilience resources over the lifecourse as well as interventions to increase resilience and ultimately yield healthier MCH outcomes among vulnerable communities. Public Significance Statement A growing body of literature has explored maternal resilience as protective factors that counter maternal stress and contribute to healthy maternal and child health outcomes. However, several gaps exist in how it has been conceptualized and operationalized. This article contributes to the literature by proposing a conceptual framework that addresses these gaps and reimagines material resilience using three population health theories, including Bronfenbrenner's socioecological framework, Elder's lifecourse theory, and Geronimus' weathering hypothesis.
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Maternal stress before and during pregnancy is associated with adverse obstetric outcomes. A growing body of literature has explored maternal resilience as protective factors contributing to healthy maternal and child health (MCH) outcomes. However, several gaps exist in how this construct has been conceptualized and operationalized. First, extant research has primarily conceptualized maternal resilience as individual attributes that enable women to "bounce back" after facing adversity during pregnancy, thereby failing to incorporate the broader systemic and environmental factors that contribute to chronic stress, particularly among vulnerable groups. Second, the literature has largely neglected to examine resilience in relation to maternal stress, therefore not acknowledging that women who experience greater stress will likely require more resources. Third, though resilience has been investigated at discrete life stages, longitudinal research has not been conducted to explore how it develops over the lifecourse. This article critically evaluates the resilience literature, expands upon the gaps described, and proposes a conceptual framework that reimagines material resilience using three population health theories, including Bronfenbrenner's socioecological framework, Elder's lifecourse theory, and Geronimus' weathering hypothesis. The proposed framework will inform future research that examines the development of multilevel resilience resources over the lifecourse as well as interventions to increase resilience and ultimately yield healthier MCH outcomes among vulnerable communities. Public Significance Statement A growing body of literature has explored maternal resilience as protective factors that counter maternal stress and contribute to healthy maternal and child health outcomes. However, several gaps exist in how it has been conceptualized and operationalized. 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Third, though resilience has been investigated at discrete life stages, longitudinal research has not been conducted to explore how it develops over the lifecourse. This article critically evaluates the resilience literature, expands upon the gaps described, and proposes a conceptual framework that reimagines material resilience using three population health theories, including Bronfenbrenner's socioecological framework, Elder's lifecourse theory, and Geronimus' weathering hypothesis. The proposed framework will inform future research that examines the development of multilevel resilience resources over the lifecourse as well as interventions to increase resilience and ultimately yield healthier MCH outcomes among vulnerable communities. Public Significance Statement A growing body of literature has explored maternal resilience as protective factors that counter maternal stress and contribute to healthy maternal and child health outcomes. 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subjects Adversity
Childrens health
Concept formation
Environmental aspects
Female
First year
Frame analysis
Health status
Human
Humans
Hypotheses
Infants
Life Span
Life stress
Life transitions
Low birth weight
Maternal & child health
Maternal and infant welfare
Maternal characteristics
Maternal stress
Mothers
Mothers - psychology
Perinatal period
Pregnancy
Protective factors
Resilience
Resilience, Psychological
Social Ecology
Stress
Stress, Psychological - psychology
Theories
Theory
Vulnerability
Women
Womens health
title Reimagining Maternal Resilience: Incorporating the Socioecological Framework, Lifecourse Theory, and Weathering Hypothesis
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