Women (Oct 2021)

The Association between Intimate Partner Violence, Depression and Influenza-like Illness Experienced by Pregnant Women in Australia

  • Susan J. Rees,
  • Ruth Wells,
  • Mohammed Mohsin,
  • Nawal Nadar,
  • Batool Moussa,
  • Fatima Hassoun,
  • Mariam Yousif,
  • Batoul Khalil,
  • Yalini Krishna,
  • Heather Nancarrow,
  • Derrick Silove,
  • Jane Fisher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/women1040017
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 4
pp. 192 – 203

Abstract

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Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) is a major public health issue, including during pregnancy where it poses a serious risk to the woman’s health. Influenza-Like Illness (ILI) also causes significant morbidity for women during pregnancy. It may be possible that ILI in pregnancy is associated with IPV, and that depression and trauma history play a role in the connection. 524 Australia-born women and 578 refugee-background women participated in the study. Baseline participants were randomly recruited and interviewed from antenatal clinics between January 2015 and March 2016, and they were reinterviewed six months post-partum. Bivariate and path analysis were used to assess links between IPV, depression and ILI. One in 10 women (10%; 111 out of 1102) reported ILI during their pregnancy period and this rate was significantly (p Beta = 0.36 p Beta = 0.26, p < 0.001). Regardless of migration history, pregnant women who have experienced IPV and depression are more likely to report influenza-like symptoms in pregnancy. This may suggest that trauma and depression negatively affect immunity, although it could also indicate a connection between depressive symptoms and physical experiences of ILI.

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