Behavioral and physiological stress responses: Within-person concordance during pregnancy

•Pregnancy is a sensitive period for the health and well-being of mother and child.•Pregnant women had concordant prosocial affect in response to stress.•Findings extend understanding of female stress responsivity to the prenatal period.•Concordance may provide a way to assess and intervene with at-...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Biological psychology 2021-02, Vol.159, p.108027-108027, Article 108027
Hauptverfasser: Vlisides-Henry, Robert D., Deboeck, Pascal R., Grill-Velasquez, Wendy, Mackey, Shantavia, Ramadurai, Dinesh K.A., Urry, Joshua O., Neff, Dylan, Terrell, Sarah, Gao, Mengyu (Miranda), Thomas, Leah R., Conradt, Elisabeth, Crowell, Sheila E.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:•Pregnancy is a sensitive period for the health and well-being of mother and child.•Pregnant women had concordant prosocial affect in response to stress.•Findings extend understanding of female stress responsivity to the prenatal period.•Concordance may provide a way to assess and intervene with at-risk peripartum women. During pregnancy, a woman’s emotions can have longstanding implications for both her own and her child’s health. Within-person emotional concordance refers to the simultaneous measurement of emotional responses across multiple levels of analysis. This method may provide insight into how pregnant women experience emotions in response to stress. We enrolled 162 pregnant women and assessed concordance through autonomic physiology (electrodermal activity [EDA], respiratory sinus arrhythmia [RSA]), and coded behavior (Prosocial, Flight, Displacement) during the Trier Social Stress Test–Speech. We used multilevel models to examine behavioral-physiological concordance and whether self-reported emotion dysregulation moderated these effects. Participants exhibited EDA-Prosocial concordance, suggesting that prosocial behavior may be a marker of stress. Emotion dysregulation did not moderate concordance. These findings provide novel information about behavioral coping to stress in pregnancy. Given the importance of observed behavior in the maintenance and treatment of psychopathology, these findings may provide a launchpad for future perinatal intervention research.
ISSN:0301-0511
1873-6246
DOI:10.1016/j.biopsycho.2021.108027