The role of perfectionism in postpartum depression and symptomatology

Berta R. Maia*, Ana T. Pereira, Mariana Marques, Sandra Bos, Maria J. Soares, José Valente, Ana A. Gomes, Maria H. Azevedo, António Macedo

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The role of perfectionism as a correlate and as a predictor of perinatal depressive symptomatology and disorder was examined. Three-hundred and eighty-six pregnant women (mean age=30.08 years; SD=4.205; range=19-44) completed the Portuguese versions of the Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale, Beck Depression Inventory-II/BDI-II and three questions evaluating anxiety trait, life stress and social support perception. Diagnoses of depression were obtained using the Portuguese version of the Diagnostic Interview for Genetic Studies/OPCRIT system.Women who were depressed in pregnancy (ICD-10/DSM-IV) were excluded from the analyses. Self-Oriented Perfectionism and Socially Prescribed Perfectionism subcomponents (Conditional Acceptance and Others' High Standards) were significant correlates of depressive symptomatology/BDI-II in pregnancy. Others' High Standards was a significant predictor of postpartum depressive symptomatology/BDI-II, after controlling the other independent variables (depressive symptomatology and trait anxiety in pregnancy, life stress and social support perception in postpartum). None of the perfectionism subscales predicted postpartum depressive disorder (ICD-10/DSM-IV). Self-Oriented Perfectionism was an important correlate of depressive symptomatology in pregnancy and Others' High Standards and Conditional Acceptance were significant correlates of perinatal depressive symptomatology. Others' High Standards accounted for 0.8 % of the depressive symptomatology variance in postpartum after controlling the effect for other depressive symptomatology correlates. Perfectionism was not a risk factor for postpartum depressive disorder. Our findings improve the knowledge regarding the risk factors implicated in the development of postpartum depressive symptomatology/disorder, which is of utmost importance to develop adequate prevention and intervention strategies.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)459-468
Number of pages10
JournalArchives of Women's Mental Health
Volume15
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2012
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Depressive disorder (ICD-10/DSM-IV)
  • Depressive symptomatology (BDI-II)
  • Perfectionism
  • Perinatal period

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