The contribution of self-compassion and social support to women’s mental health during pregnancy: A comparison between international and national crisis periods.

Publication date: Jan 23, 2025

The present study aimed to examine the contribution of self-compassion and perceived social support from family, partner, and friends, along with pregnancy-related variables, and concerns about the fetus and childbirth, to pregnant women’s mental health, comparing two different crises. A sample of 220 women was recruited during the COVID-19 pandemic, and another sample of 224 women was recruited during the Israel-Hamas war. Participants were enrolled through a convenience sample and completed a set of self-report questionnaires. Women’s mental health, self-compassion, and perceived support from family and partner were significantly higher during the COVID-19 pandemic compared with the war. Furthermore, women’s mental health had positive and significant associations with self-compassion and perceived social support from all sources. Moreover, the association between self-compassion and mental health was moderated by the event. The findings suggest that the pregnancy period should be examined under various unique stressful events to better understand the appropriate coping resources that can ameliorate women’s stress due to a major stressful event alongside the challenges inherent in pregnancy itself. They also suggest that self-compassion is a context-dependent variable and more dynamic than previously understood. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

Concepts Keywords
Childbirth Compassion
Database Contribution
Friends Covid
Israel Event
Pandemic Health
Mental
Pandemic
Partner
Perceived
Pregnancy
Recruited
Self
Social
War
Women

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide

Original Article

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