J Korean Soc Matern Child Health.  2016 Jan;20(1):54-65. 10.21896/jksmch.2016.20.1.54.

Factors Influencing Maternal Depression in Low-Income Families with Young Children

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Social and Child Welfare, Woosong University, Daejeon, Korea. miso2child@naver.com

Abstract

PURPOSE
This study aimed to investigate the factors influencing maternal depression in low-income families with young children.
METHODS
The study consisted of 376 mothers in low-income families from participants enrolled in the population-based study of 2011 PSKC by Korea Institute of Child Care and Education. The factors including depression, self-esteem, parenting stress, marital conflict, father involvement in child rearing, social support, and family life event were assessed with questionnaires. Data analysis was conducted by description analysis, partial correlation, and hierarchical regression using SPSS 22.0 program.
RESULTS
The results showed that 10.6% of mothers were in severe depressive group in this study. Also the result revealed that marital conflict was the strongest predictor of maternal depression.
CONCLUSION
The results suggest that mothers with young children in low-income families especially had difficulty with depression due to family related factors. Implications included the need to support mothers and develop intervention programs focusing on family relationships in order to improve and sustain mental health.

Keyword

maternal depression; self-esteem; parenting stress; marital conflict; father involvement; social support; family life event

MeSH Terms

Child Care
Child Rearing
Child*
Depression*
Education
Family Conflict
Family Relations
Fathers
Humans
Korea
Mental Health
Mothers
Parenting
Parents
Statistics as Topic
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