SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.57 issue2Teen pregnancy and educational gaps: Analysis of a national survey in MexicoLiving in hemodialysis without social insurance: The voices of renal sick people and their families author indexsubject indexsearch form
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

Related links

  • Have no similar articlesSimilars in SciELO

Share


Salud Pública de México

Print version ISSN 0036-3634

Abstract

DE CASTRO, Filipa; PLACE, Jean Marie; VILLALOBOS, Aremis  and  ALLEN-LEIGH, Betania. Maternal depressive symptomatology in México: National prevalence, care, and population risk profiles. Salud pública Méx [online]. 2015, vol.57, n.2, pp.144-154. ISSN 0036-3634.

Objective. This study estimates the prevalence of depressive symptomatology (DS) in women with children younger than five years of age, examines detection and care rates and probabilities of developing DS based on specific risk profiles. Materials and methods. The sample consists of 7 187 women with children younger than five drawn from the Ensanut 2012. Results. DS prevalence is 19.91%, which means at least 4.6 million children live with mothers who experience depressive symptoms indicative of moderate to severe depression. Rates of detection (17.06%) and care (15.19%) for depression are low. DS is associated with violence (OR=2.34; IC95% 1.06-5.15), having ≥4 children, having a female baby, older age of the last child, low birth weight, food insecurity, and sexual debut <15 years old (p<0.01). Accumulated probability of DS, taking into consideration all risk factors measured, is 69.76%. It could be reduced to 13.21% through prevention efforts focused on eliminating violence, food insecurity, bias against having a female baby, and low birth weight. Conclusions. DS is a compelling public health problem in Mexico associated with a well-defined set of risk factors that warrant attention and timely detection at various levels of care.

Keywords : depression; depresive symptomatology; risk factors; detection; care; Mexico.

        · abstract in Spanish     · text in Spanish