Psychosocial Support and Coping in Pregnancy
Pregnancy is a period of significant emotional and social adjustment, and psychosocial support—through relationships, midwifery and nursing care, and the wider social network—helps women cope with the demands of the transition to parenthood. Attention to maternal mental wellbeing is part of antenatal care because anxiety and depression are common in the perinatal period and can affect mother, fetus, and child.
Definition
Psychosocial support and coping in pregnancy refers to the emotional, informational, and practical support available to a pregnant woman—from partners, family, peers, and health professionals—together with her strategies for managing stress and adjusting to pregnancy and impending parenthood.
Scope
This topic provides a reference-educational overview of psychosocial wellbeing, social support, and coping during pregnancy, and why they are addressed in antenatal care. It does not offer clinical assessment instruments for individual use, treatment plans, or crisis management instructions.
Core questions
- How common are anxiety and depression during the antenatal period?
- What roles do social support and the care relationship play in maternal coping?
- How can psychosocial wellbeing in pregnancy affect maternal, fetal, and child outcomes?
- What models of antenatal care aim to strengthen support and coping?
Key concepts
- Social support (emotional, informational, practical)
- Antenatal anxiety and depression
- Coping and stress adaptation
- Transition to parenthood
- Continuity of carer
- Group antenatal care
- Perinatal mental health
- Stigma and help-seeking
Mechanisms
Pregnancy involves psychological adjustment to a changing body, identity, and role, and the quality of a woman's social support and care relationships shapes how she copes with this transition. Perinatal mental disorders such as anxiety and depression are common and, when untreated, are associated with effects on the woman and, through several pathways, on fetal and child development. Antenatal care addresses this by providing emotional and informational support, by enabling help-seeking, and through care models—such as continuity of carer and group antenatal care—that can strengthen the supportive relationship.
Clinical relevance
Recognising and supporting psychosocial wellbeing is a component of holistic antenatal nursing and midwifery care, and awareness of common perinatal mental health conditions supports timely onward referral. This entry is educational and describes the field at a conceptual level; it does not provide screening tools, diagnostic criteria, or treatment guidance for individual care.
Epidemiology
Systematic review and meta-analysis indicate that antenatal anxiety and depression affect a substantial minority of pregnant women, making them among the more common health concerns of the perinatal period.
Evidence & guidelines
Authoritative reviews summarise the prevalence and consequences of non-psychotic perinatal mental disorders and their effects on the fetus and child, and a Cochrane review has evaluated group versus conventional antenatal care as one model intended to enhance support. These inform antenatal care that attends to psychosocial as well as clinical needs.
Debates
- How best to organise antenatal care to support wellbeing?
- Models such as group antenatal care and continuity of carer have been proposed to strengthen relationships and peer support, but evidence on their comparative effects on psychosocial and clinical outcomes continues to be evaluated.
Related topics
Seminal works
- howard-2014
- stein-2014
Frequently asked questions
- Are anxiety and depression common during pregnancy?
- Yes; systematic reviews indicate that antenatal anxiety and depression affect a substantial minority of pregnant women, which is why psychosocial wellbeing is part of antenatal care and warrants attention and, where needed, referral.
- Why does social support matter in pregnancy?
- Emotional, informational, and practical support from partners, family, peers, and health professionals helps women cope with the adjustments of pregnancy and the transition to parenthood, and is associated with better experiences of maternity care.