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A Shoulder to Lean On
The Need for Social Support
during Pregnancy
during Pregnancy
By Jennifer Lacey
The time before the impending arrival of your little one may be filled with a mixed bag of great joy, stress, fatigue and anxiety. The value and development of a strong social and emotional support system during your pregnancy may ultimately provide the key to get you through the rough, bumpy moments ahead, marking a healthy new beginning for yourself, your spouse and your baby-to-be.
Social support for expectant women also can be found right in their own backgrounds, as friends, family and, most important, their spouse/partner can play an important role in assisting Mom-to-be with her emotional and physical needs.
"Both partners are undoubtedly thinking about the future of their family system and the well-being of their unborn child," says Johnson. "This can be a time when a relationship can be strengthened as both partners keep lines of communication open about their feelings, concerns and even fears." This is especially true for women who are pregnant for the first time. Aside from the physical changes they are experiencing, women are also going through tremendous emotional and hormonal changes.
Recent research suggests that of the approximately 12 million American women diagnosed with clinical depression each year, between 10 to 15 percent of these cases are diagnosed with depression during pregnancy, says the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI), based in Arlington, Va. NAMI also estimates that there is a three-fold increase in risk for developing a depressive disorder during or following pregnancy.
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