NURS 751 Evidence-Based Article Review
| Fetal & Infant Outcomes in Parents with
Perinatal Mental Disorders | 2026
Updated.
SECTION 1: ARTICLE SUMMARY
1.1 Main Points Presented by the Author
Perinatal mental disorders, particularly depression, anxiety, and stress, represent a
significant global health concern affecting up to 20% of pregnant and postpartum
individuals worldwide . The evidence-based review synthesizes findings demonstrating
that maternal psychological distress during pregnancy is associated with measurable
differences in child neurodevelopmental outcomes across cognitive, language,
socioemotional, and behavioral domains.
Key epidemiological findings include:
, Perinatal depression affects 5-33% of pregnant individuals, with rates as high
as 25% in low- and middle-income countries
Symptoms may persist for up to three years in some individuals
15.2% total pregnancy prevalence for anxiety disorders, with 9.9% postpartum
prevalence
1 in 7 women experience peripartum depression during pregnancy or the first
weeks following childbirth
Adverse outcomes associated with perinatal mental disorders include:
Maternal/Obstetric Outcomes Fetal/Neonatal Outcomes Infant/Child Outcomes
Gestational hypertension Preterm delivery Adverse neurodevelopment
Placental anomalies Fetal growth restriction Behavioral difficulties
Inadequate prenatal care Low birth weight Attention problems
High-risk behaviors NICU admission Lower cognitive/language scores
Stillbirth Emotional regulation deficits
The authors emphasize that maternal mental illness during pregnancy has been linked
to preterm delivery, newborn hypoglycemia, poor neurodevelopmental outcomes,
and disturbed attachment . Placental anomalies, small-for-gestational-age fetuses,
fetal distress, and stillbirth represent additional undesirable perinatal outcomes.
1.2 Overall Argument
The article's central argument is that perinatal mental disorders are not isolated
maternal health issues but represent critical determinants of fetal and infant
developmental trajectories. The authors argue that the biological mechanisms linking
, maternal psychological distress to adverse child outcomes operate through multiple
pathways:
1. HPA Axis Dysregulation:
Chronic stress during pregnancy triggers the maternal stress response, increasing
production of stress hormones like cortisol. These hormones can cross the placenta,
altering uteroplacental blood flow and disrupting nutrient/oxygen delivery to the
developing fetus . This mechanism directly affects fetal brain development pathways.
2. Inflammatory Pathways:
Inflammatory stress responses associated with pregnancy may interfere with fetal
neurodevelopment . Cytokines such as IL-6 and TNF-alpha have been linked to "sickness
behavior" and adverse developmental outcomes.
3. Epigenetic Mechanisms:
Maternal psychological distress can induce epigenetic changes that affect gene
expression without altering the DNA sequence. These changes can imprint on the child's
developmental trajectory and persist throughout life .
4. Gene-Environment Interactions:
Polymorphisms in genes implicated in stress response, neurotransmitter systems, and
neurodevelopment can modulate the influence of maternal distress on the developing
fetus .
5. Disrupted Mother-Infant Interaction:
Postpartum depression and anxiety can impair maternal sensitivity, responsiveness, and
the quality of mother-infant attachment, further compromising child development
through compromised caregiving environments .
| Fetal & Infant Outcomes in Parents with
Perinatal Mental Disorders | 2026
Updated.
SECTION 1: ARTICLE SUMMARY
1.1 Main Points Presented by the Author
Perinatal mental disorders, particularly depression, anxiety, and stress, represent a
significant global health concern affecting up to 20% of pregnant and postpartum
individuals worldwide . The evidence-based review synthesizes findings demonstrating
that maternal psychological distress during pregnancy is associated with measurable
differences in child neurodevelopmental outcomes across cognitive, language,
socioemotional, and behavioral domains.
Key epidemiological findings include:
, Perinatal depression affects 5-33% of pregnant individuals, with rates as high
as 25% in low- and middle-income countries
Symptoms may persist for up to three years in some individuals
15.2% total pregnancy prevalence for anxiety disorders, with 9.9% postpartum
prevalence
1 in 7 women experience peripartum depression during pregnancy or the first
weeks following childbirth
Adverse outcomes associated with perinatal mental disorders include:
Maternal/Obstetric Outcomes Fetal/Neonatal Outcomes Infant/Child Outcomes
Gestational hypertension Preterm delivery Adverse neurodevelopment
Placental anomalies Fetal growth restriction Behavioral difficulties
Inadequate prenatal care Low birth weight Attention problems
High-risk behaviors NICU admission Lower cognitive/language scores
Stillbirth Emotional regulation deficits
The authors emphasize that maternal mental illness during pregnancy has been linked
to preterm delivery, newborn hypoglycemia, poor neurodevelopmental outcomes,
and disturbed attachment . Placental anomalies, small-for-gestational-age fetuses,
fetal distress, and stillbirth represent additional undesirable perinatal outcomes.
1.2 Overall Argument
The article's central argument is that perinatal mental disorders are not isolated
maternal health issues but represent critical determinants of fetal and infant
developmental trajectories. The authors argue that the biological mechanisms linking
, maternal psychological distress to adverse child outcomes operate through multiple
pathways:
1. HPA Axis Dysregulation:
Chronic stress during pregnancy triggers the maternal stress response, increasing
production of stress hormones like cortisol. These hormones can cross the placenta,
altering uteroplacental blood flow and disrupting nutrient/oxygen delivery to the
developing fetus . This mechanism directly affects fetal brain development pathways.
2. Inflammatory Pathways:
Inflammatory stress responses associated with pregnancy may interfere with fetal
neurodevelopment . Cytokines such as IL-6 and TNF-alpha have been linked to "sickness
behavior" and adverse developmental outcomes.
3. Epigenetic Mechanisms:
Maternal psychological distress can induce epigenetic changes that affect gene
expression without altering the DNA sequence. These changes can imprint on the child's
developmental trajectory and persist throughout life .
4. Gene-Environment Interactions:
Polymorphisms in genes implicated in stress response, neurotransmitter systems, and
neurodevelopment can modulate the influence of maternal distress on the developing
fetus .
5. Disrupted Mother-Infant Interaction:
Postpartum depression and anxiety can impair maternal sensitivity, responsiveness, and
the quality of mother-infant attachment, further compromising child development
through compromised caregiving environments .