Postpartum Maternal Mood Among Hadza Foragers of Tanzania: A Mixed Methods Approach

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

10-23-2019

Publication Title

Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry

Volume

2019

First page number:

1

Last page number:

28

Abstract

Infant and maternal mortality rates are among the highest in the world in low and middle-income countries where postpartum depression impacts at least one in five women. Currently, there is a dearth of data on maternal mood and infant health outcomes in small-scale non-industrial populations from such countries, particularly during the postnatal period. Here, we present the first investigation of postpartum maternal mood among a foraging population, the Hadza of Tanzania. We administered the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) to twenty-three women, all with infants under the age of 12 months. Semi-structured interviews on happiness and unhappiness during the post-partum period served as a validity cross-check for the EPDS. The combined results of the EPDS surveys and the interview responses suggest that a high proportion of Hadza women experience significant mood disturbances following birth and that postpartum unhappiness is associated with self-reports of pain, anxiety, and disturbed sleep patterns. These findings suggest that many of the mothers in our sample are experiencing post-partum unhappiness at levels similar to or higher than those reported for low to middle income countries in general, including Tanzania. These data are critical for improving our understanding of the etiologies of postpartum mood disturbances cross-culturally.

Keywords

EPDS; Hadza; Maternal health; Postpartum depression; Foragers

Disciplines

Anthropology | Biological and Physical Anthropology | Social and Behavioral Sciences

Language

English

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