Exploring How Women’s Reproductive Health and Mental Health Intersect

This is a photo of three generations of women in the park.Throughout their lives, women’s risk for various mental health problems fluctuates along with reproductive changes, yet research in psychological science seldom investigates the intersection of reproductive health and mental health.

A special series in Clinical Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, addresses these intersecting issues directly, presenting a collection of research articles that takes a multilevel, integrative view of women’s mental health in the context of reproductive development.

The special series is guest-edited by psychology researchers Jane Mendle (Cornell University), Tory Eisenlohr-Moul (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), and Jeff Kiesner (Universita di Padova).

“In women, epidemiological links between reproductive change and risk for psychopathology are clear,” Mendle, Eisenlohr-Moul, and Kiesner write in their introduction to the series. “Psychological symptoms continue to shift in relation to reproductive events—for example, the menstrual cycle, childbirth, menopause— across women’s lives. This occurs not just in America and other Western, industrialized nations but on all inhabited continents.”

Depression provides particularly clear evidence of these strong links. Accumulated research shows that girls are at much greater risk of depression at puberty than are boys – a relatively increased risk that then continues through adulthood, rising during the transition to menopause and falling again after menopause.

Despite this, few psychological scientists include reproductive change as an integral component of their theoretical models. This lack of integration, due in part to societal taboos regarding female reproduction and scientific uncertainty in interpreting biologically-based sex differences, has significant consequences for clinical science, and for women, generally.

“By neglecting one of the most basic facets of women’s lives, our field has left fundamental questions unanswered,” the co-editors argue.

Indeed, researchers and clinicians do not yet have a clear understanding of which women are at greatest risk of experiencing difficulties in relation to reproductive change, nor which tools are most likely to prevent or ameliorate their difficulties.

With the aim of encouraging “a new generation of dialogue and scholarship on women and mental health,” Mendle, Eisenlohr-Moul, and Kiesner have assembled a collection of research articles that introduces readers to the complex interactions between reproductive health and mental health throughout women’s lives:

  • Exploring sex differences in depression and anxiety at puberty, Alloy and colleagues find evidence that girls who mature early are more likely to ruminate during the transition to puberty, which may account for their heightened vulnerability to depression.
  • Kiesner and colleagues examine how women’s physical symptoms, affective symptoms, and cognitive style change across the menstrual cycle, finding that patterns of change vary considerably between people.
  • Taking an innovative approach to the traditional twin-study design, Klump and co-authors investigate how individual differences in estrogen and progesterone moderate the effects that genetic and environmental factors have on emotional eating.
  • Presenting longitudinal data collected over the course of multiple pregnancies, Dunkel Schetter and colleagues identify four types of life stressors that may predispose women to recurring postpartum depression.
  • Gordon, Girdler, and co-authors provide a novel investigation of the perimenopausal rise in depression, finding links between estradiol fluctuation, dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, and women’s negative mood.

Mendle, Eisenlohr-Moul, and Kiesner note that addressing and answering core questions about the relationship between reproductive changes and mental health will require new theoretical frameworks that accommodate the complex, multilevel interactions between biology, personal experience, and environmental factors as manifested within individuals across the entire lifespan.

“Building and testing such models is a daunting task. Yet the alternative is to consider simplistic models that ignore cross-level effects and interactions and will likely provide shallow insights and dead-end research endeavors. We believe the field is ready for this challenge,” they conclude.


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