Issue III Released
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Authors
Hyacinth Joy T. Natividad *1
1Bulacan State University - Meneses Campus
*Corresponding Author: hyacinthjoynatividad@gmail.com
Received: 17 May 2025
Accepted: 18 May 2025
Published: 05 November 2025
Background: Maternal stress in pregnancy is linked to adverse outcomes, but evidence is scattered.
Objective: Identify which stress types/timings matter most, mechanisms, and practice/policy implications.
Methods: Qualitative synthesis of 13 studies/reviews (cohorts, case–control, disaster quasi-experiments) from biomedical and social databases; extracted key features and coded themes.
Results: Prenatal stress was associated with preterm birth, low birthweight, growth restriction, hypertensive/infectious complications, and later neurocognitive and behavioral problems. Effects varied by timing (early: organogenesis; late: emotion regulation), dose, and stressor (financial hardship, intimate-partner violence, disasters, depression, strenuous work). Mechanisms included HPA-axis dysregulation, cortisol/inflammation, altered placental function, and brain connectivity changes. Social determinants (care access, poverty, support) moderated risk and resilience.
Significance: Evidence supports routine stress screening, stepped mental-health care, and policies that reduce financial/environmental stressors, mandate workplace accommodations, and bolster social support. Integrating psychosocial screening with obstetrics and timing-sensitive interventions may improve birth outcomes and neurodevelopment. Research should test causal pathways, target gestational windows, and follow children long term.
Conclusion: Addressing maternal stress is central to prenatal care; small prenatal gains can yield lasting family benefits.