Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
921541 | Biological Psychology | 2008 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Sixty healthy pregnant women (aged 21–35 years), including 30 pregnant women at the beginning of second trimester and 30 women at the beginning of third trimester underwent a psychosocial stress test. Physiological (salivary free cortisol levels, salivary alpha-amylase levels) and psychological (perceived stress, mood, anxiety) responses to standardized psychosocial stress have been brought in association with psychosocial resources (self-efficacy and daily uplifts). Predictions revealed that higher resources predict lower physiological and psychological stress responses and higher mood levels. We conclude from our data that psychosocial resources appear to dampen psychological and physiological stress response during pregnancy.
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Authors
Ada Nierop, Petra H. Wirtz, Aliki Bratsikas, Roland Zimmermann, Ulrike Ehlert,