Satomi Murase’s research while affiliated with Nagoya University and other places

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Publications (45)


Best-fit model of the confirmatory factor analysis
Scores on the Japanese version of the IDDL
EFA of the Japanese version of the IDDL (n = 278, maximum-likelihood estimation with promax rotation)
CFA of the Japanese version of the IDDL
Validation and factor structure of the Japanese version of the inventory to diagnose depression, lifetime version for pregnant women
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June 2020

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Introduction A history of major depressive disorder before pregnancy is one risk factor for peripartum depression. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to examine the validation and factor structure of the Japanese version of the Inventory to Diagnose Depression, Lifetime version (IDDL) for pregnant women. Methods The study participants were 556 pregnant women. Factor analysis was performed to identify the factor structure, construct validity was examined based on the results of the factor analysis, and reliability was examined using Cronbach’s α coefficient. Results Based on the results of the factor analysis of the IDDL, a bifactor model composed of a single general dimension along with the following five factors was extracted: (1) depression, anxiety, and irritability (items 1, 2, 8–10, and 19–21); (2) retardation, decreased concentration, indecisiveness, and insomnia (items 4, 11, 12, and 17); (3) decrease in appetite/significant weight loss (items 13 and 14); (4) increase in appetite/significant weight gain (items 15 and 16); and (5) diminished interest, pleasure, and libido (items 5–7). Cronbach’s α coefficients for these five factors were as follows: 0.910, 0.815, 0.780, 0.683, and 0.803, respectively. Conclusions The reliability, construct validity, and factor structure of the Japanese version of the IDDL were confirmed in pregnant women.

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Flowchart of the study.
Forward stepwise logistic regression models.
The Risk Factors Predicting Suicidal Ideation Among Perinatal Women in Japan

May 2020

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103 Reads

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23 Citations

Introduction The aim of the present study was to elucidate the foreseeable risk factors for suicidal ideation among Japanese perinatal women. Methods This cohort study was conducted in Nagoya, Japan, from July 2012 to March 2018. The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) questionnaire was conducted at four time points: early pregnancy, late pregnancy, 5 days postpartum, and 1 month postpartum. A total of 430 women completed the questionnaires. A logistic regression analysis was performed using the presence of suicidal ideation on the EPDS as an objective variable. The explanatory variables were age, presence of physical or mental disease, smoking and drinking habits, education, hospital types, EPDS total score in early pregnancy, bonding, and quality and amount of social support, as well as the history of major depressive disorder (MDD). Results The rate of participants who were suspected of having suicidal ideation at any of the four time points was 11.6% (n=52), with the highest (n=25, 5.8%) at late pregnancy. For suicidal ideation, education level (OR: 1.19; 95% CI: 1.00–1.41; p=0.047), EPDS total points in the pregnancy period (OR: 1.25; 95% CI: 1.16–1.34; p < 0.000), a history of MDD (OR: 2.16; 95% CI: 1.00–4.79; p=0.049), and presence of mental disease (OR: 2.39; 95% CI: 1.00–5.70; p=0.049) were found to be risk factors for suicidal ideation. Age [odds ratio (OR): 0.88; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.80–0.95; p=.002] and quality of social support (OR: 0.77; 95% CI: 0.60–0.99; p=.041) were found to be protective factors. Conclusion Based on these results, effective preventive interventions, such as increasing the quality of social support and confirming the history of depression, should be carried out in pregnant depressive women at the early stage of the perinatal period.


Path model of perinatal depressive symptoms, harm avoidance, and a history of major depressive disorder. Significant paths are in bold. T1, during pregnancy; T2, at 1 month postpartum; MDD, major depressive disorder; HA, harm avoidance; e, error.
Comparison of the variables between pregnant women with and those without a history of MDD.
Correlations between the variables.
Relation Between Perinatal Depressive Symptoms, Harm Avoidance, and a History of Major Depressive Disorder: A Cohort Study of Pregnant Women in Japan

July 2019

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76 Reads

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7 Citations

Introduction: The relationship between perinatal depressive symptoms, harm avoidance (HA), and a history of major depressive disorder (MDD) was examined in a prospective cohort study. Methods: This study was conducted from May 1, 2011, to December 31, 2016. A history of MDD was evaluated using the Inventory to Diagnose Depression, Lifetime version during pregnancy. Depressive state and HA were evaluated during pregnancy and at 1 month postnatal using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) and Temperament and Character Inventory, respectively. The relationship between these variances was examined using structural equation modeling. Results: A total of 338 participants with complete data were included in the present study. Pregnant women with compared with those without a history of MDD were observed to have a significantly higher intensity of HA and more severe depressive symptoms in both the prenatal and postnatal periods. A history of MDD affected the severity of depressive symptoms [standardized path coefficient (SPC) = 0.25, p < 0.001] and the intensity of HA during pregnancy (SPC = 0.36, p < 0.001). The intensity of HA during pregnancy affected that at 1 month postnatal (SPC = 0.78, p < 0.001), while the severity of depressive symptoms as assessed by the EPDS during pregnancy affected that at 1 month postnatal (SPC = 0.41, p < 0.001). The SPC for perinatal HA to postnatal depressive symptoms (SPC = 0.13, p = 0.014) was significant and higher than that for perinatal depressive symptoms to postnatal HA (SPC = 0.06, p = 0.087). Conclusion: The present results suggest that early intervention in pregnant women with a history of MDD or a high intensity of HA is important to prevent postnatal depressive symptoms.


The path diagram for the best-fit model in CFAs.
Stable factor structure of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale during the whole peripartum period: Results from a Japanese prospective cohort study

December 2018

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105 Reads

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44 Citations

Abstract Early detection of perinatal depression is an urgent issue. Our study aimed to examine the construct validity and factor structure of the Japanese version of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) from a prospective cohort study from pregnancy to postpartum. A total of 1075 women completed all items of the EPDS at four time points: early pregnancy, late pregnancy, 5 days postpartum and 1 month postpartum. The participants were randomly divided into two sample sets. The first sample set (n = 304) was used for exploratory factor analysis, and the second sample set (n = 771) was used for confirmatory factor analysis. As a result, the Cronbach’s alpha coefficients of the EPDS items were 0.762, 0.740, 0.765 and 0.772 at the four time points. From the confirmatory factor analysis of the EPDS in a sample set of Japanese women from pregnancy to postpartum, the following three factors were detected: depression (items 7, 9), anxiety (items 4, 5) and anhedonia (items 1, 2). In conclusion, the EPDS is a useful rating scale, and its factor structure is consistently stable during the whole peripartum period.


Impact of perceived rearing and social support on bonding failure and depression among mothers: A longitudinal study of pregnant women

September 2018

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58 Reads

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32 Citations

Journal of Psychiatric Research

Background: Although previous studies have reported associations between bonding failure, depression, social support among mothers, and perceived rearing, the causal relationships remain unclear. Methods: A total of 855 women (mean age, 32.4 ± 4.4 years) completed the Mother-Infant Bonding Questionnaire (MIBQ), the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), the Japanese version of the Social Support Questionnaire, and the Parental Bonding Instrument in early pregnancy before week 25 (T1) and at 1 month after delivery (T2). We created a path model to clarify the causal relationships between perinatal bonding failure, depression, social support, and perceived rearing during pregnancy and at 1 month after delivery. The model was tested using structural equation modeling. Results: Our recursive model showed acceptable fit (chi-squared statistic/degree of freedom = 2.1, comparative fit index = 0.98, root mean square error of approximation = 0.04). It was revealed that: (1) at T1, higher overprotection significantly predicted MIBQ scores; (2) at T1, poorer social support significantly predicted both MIBQ and EPDS scores; and (3) at T1, both MIBQ and EPDS scores significantly predicted respective scores at T2. Conclusions: These results showed that bonding failure in the postpartum period was significantly influenced by mothers' own perceived rearing and social support during pregnancy. In addition, depression in the postpartum period was strongly influenced by social support during pregnancy. These findings suggest that psychosocial interventions that focus on both mothers' recollections of their own upbringing and social support during pregnancy are effective for preventing bonding failure and depression in the postpartum period.


Figure 1. Mean total and subscale scores on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale.
Postpartum depression among women in Nagoya indirectly exposed to the Great East Japan Earthquake

August 2018

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63 Reads

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9 Citations

This study aimed to assess the situation of postpartum depression and maternal bonding in Nagoya, a city distant from the epicenter of the Great East Japan Earthquake that occurred on March 11, 2011. Among the participants at 1 month after childbirth between March 11, 2010 and March 10, 2013 (n = 188), 152 fully responded to the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) and Mother-Infant Bonding Questionnaire (MIBQ). They were divided into pre-quake (n = 58), and 0-6, 6-12, 12-18, and 18-24 months after the earthquake groups (n = 20, 26, 29, and 19, respectively). The rate of mothers who scored above the cutoff point for the EPDS increased from 12.1% in the pre-quake to 35.0% in the 0-6 months group (p = 0.022). The EPDS total and anxiety subscale scores (mean ± standard error) were also significantly different between the pre-quake and 0-6 months after the earthquake groups (4.45 ± 0.50 vs. 7.95 ± 1.47, p = 0.024; 2.16 ± 0.26 vs. 3.65 ± 0.57, p = 0.021, respectively). The EPDS total and anxiety scores were the highest for the 0-6 months group, followed by the 6-12, 12-18, 18-24 months groups (p = 0.019, p = 0.022). MIBQ scores did not differ between the pre-quake and 0-6 months groups. Depressive symptoms, mainly explained by anxiety, increased after the earthquake with no changes in maternal bonding.


TABLE 2 | Factor structure of the Highs scale item over the four time points in Group 1.
Validation and Factor Analysis of the Japanese Version of the Highs Scale in Perinatal Women

June 2018

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110 Reads

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1 Citation

Background: The Highs scale has been developed to evaluate hypomanic symptoms in the first postpartum week. However, it has not been elucidated whether this scale is also applicable to pregnant women. To address this issue, we confirmed the factor structure, reliability, and validity of the Japanese version of the Highs scale for pregnant and postpartum women. Methods: 418 women provided effective responses to both the Highs scale and the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) during early pregnancy (before week 25), late pregnancy (around week 36), at 5 days and at 1 month after delivery. Subjects were randomly divided into two groups, and exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were performed for each group. Cronbach's alpha was calculated and the correlation of the Highs scale with EPDS was analyzed. The correlation between the subscales was analyzed at four time points, and the correlation of subscales between the four time points was confirmed. Results: This scale was found to have the two-factor structure with elation and agitation subscales. The two subscales had reasonable internal consistency at all time points (Cronbach's alpha range: Factor 1, 0.696–0.758; Factor 2, 0.553–0.694). The overall scale had reasonable internal consistency at all time points (Cronbach's alpha range: 0.672–0.738). Based on the correlation analysis of the two subscales and EPDS, discriminative and convergent validity were indicated at all time points, confirming the construct validity of the Highs scale. Subscale scores showed a significant correlation with EPDS at all time points (r = 0.388, 0.384, 0.498, and 0.442, p < 0.01). Conclusions: The Japanese version of the Highs scale is reliable and valid, and can be applied for evaluating the hypomanic symptoms during pregnancy and postpartum period.



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Social support helps protect against perinatal bonding failure and depression among mothers: A prospective cohort study

December 2017

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246 Reads

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70 Citations

Causal relationships between perinatal bonding failure, depression, and social support among mothers remain unclear. A total of 494 women (mean age 32.4 ± 4.5 years) completed the Mother-Infant Bonding Questionnaire (MIBQ), the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), and the Japanese version of the Social Support Questionnaire in early pregnancy before week 25 (T1) and 1 month after delivery (T2). Our model of recursive structured equation modeling (SEM) showed acceptable fit (CMIN/df = 2.2, CFI = 0.97, and RMSEA = 0.05). It was revealed that: (1) a lower number of supportive persons at T1 significantly predicted both MIBQ and EPDS scores at T1 and T2; (2) at T1, poorer satisfaction with the social support received significantly predicted EPDS scores; (3) both MIBQ and EPDS scores at T1 significantly predicted their respective scores at T2. Out cohort study indicates that the number of individuals who are available to provide social support and the degree of satisfaction with the level of social support received during pregnancy have a great influence on bonding failure and depression in the postpartum period. These findings suggest that psychosocial interventions that focus on these two aspects of social support during pregnancy are effective in preventing bonding failure and depression in the postpartum period.



Citations (27)


... These include mood disorders, lack of sleep, pregnancy complications, extreme maternal age, stress, intimate partner violence, low education, and physical or mental illness. [1][2][3][4][5] Although most risk factors are non-modifiable, identifying them can help healthcare providers and researchers understand the biopsychosocial mechanisms contributing to perinatal suicide and develop more effective suicide prevention strategies. 5 ...

Reference:

Attempted suicide by hanging in a pregnant adolescent with psychiatric illness: A case report
The Risk Factors Predicting Suicidal Ideation Among Perinatal Women in Japan

... Of the studies that evaluated the possible presence of depression in pregnancy three of them reported information on the diagnosis (Underwood et al., 2017;Giardinelli et al., 2012;Mohamad Yusuff et al., 2015), nine studies measured depressive symptomatology without reporting a clinical diagnosis (Batmaz et al., 2015;De Venter et al., 2016;Kaźmierczak et al., 2020;Kubota et al., 2019;Lara et al., 2015;Tariq et al., 2021;Wu et al., 2022), five studies indicated that they controlled also for this variable without clarifying an eventual presence of clinical diagnosis (Choi et al., 2014;Dmitrovic et al., 2014;Leigh & Milgrom, 2008;Martínez-Borba et al., 2020;Ongeri et al., 2018), and five included women's retrospectively self-reported diagnosis (Alhasanat et al., 2017;Chojenta et al., 2016;Peng et al., 2021;Tariq et al., 2021;Walker et al., 2021). ...

Relation Between Perinatal Depressive Symptoms, Harm Avoidance, and a History of Major Depressive Disorder: A Cohort Study of Pregnant Women in Japan

... This finding was consistent across similar studies conducted in other settings like Slovak, 43 China, 44 England 45 and Japan. 46 An Iranian study showed, similar to the current research, that EPDS includes three factors, but they were categorized as euthymic mood, anxiety, and depression. 47 These findings reflect the fact that depression, anxiety, and anhedonia are interrelated mental health conditions often observed together, each influencing and exacerbating the others. ...

Stable factor structure of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale during the whole peripartum period: Results from a Japanese prospective cohort study

... However, own perceived childhood experiences have great agreement with the ratings of other family members and had important implications for various developmental outcomes including mental health outcomes and own parenting behaviors (Parker 1989, Kitamura and Suzuki 1993, Barrig Jo 2008, Danese and Widom 2020. Negative perceptions of childhood maternal care are associated with heightened risk for postpartum depression and anxiety as well as with mother-infant bonding difficulties (Boyce et al. 1991, McMahon et al. 2005, Mayes and Leckman 2007, Choi et al. 2010, Grant et al. 2012, Hall et al. 2015, Ohara et al. 2018, Fukui et al. 2021. Parents who report low childhood maternal care had daughters who were likely to also report low childhood care (Miller et al. 1997). ...

Impact of perceived rearing and social support on bonding failure and depression among mothers: A longitudinal study of pregnant women
  • Citing Article
  • September 2018

Journal of Psychiatric Research

... Büyük Japonya depremi sonrası merkez üssünden uzak bir şehirde yapılan araştırmanın sonuçları; kadınların deprem öncesinde %12,1 olan depresyon riskinin, depremden sonraki 0-6 aylarda %35,0'a yükseldiğini, kaygı düzeylerinin depremden öncesine göre arttığını, yüksek depresyon riskinin ve kaygının 24 aya kadar sürdüğünü göstermiştir [53]. Japonya depreminin travmatik etkilerini ve doğum sonrası depresif belirtileri araştıran bir çalışmanın sonuçları, gebelerin yaklaşık olarak beşte ikisinin depremle ilgili en az 1 travmatik deneyim yaşadığını ve doğumdan 1 ay sonra postpartum depresif belirti prevalansının %13,3 olduğunu bildirmiştir. ...

Postpartum depression among women in Nagoya indirectly exposed to the Great East Japan Earthquake

... In 2018, WHO provided guidance on care of mothers in labour in the context of a positive child birth experience, 28,29 with the partograph imminently undergoing massive revision to enable care based on emerging evidence and global priorities. [30][31][32] Our data provides us with local contextualized evidence required to further understand the use and effectiveness of the LCG in Uganda and similar settings. In this ambispective cohort, we used a customized LCG, a recent modification of the WHO LCG to align with MOH's reproductive health care programs, printed back to back on an A4 as a one stop quick reference document to aid clinical decisions, team work, accountability and interaction among HCPs, women and others on the care team like the birth companion and family members. ...

Social support helps protect against perinatal bonding failure and depression among mothers: A prospective cohort study

... PPD symptoms has often been conceptualized as reciprocal or bidirectional. However, recent evidence from two studies suggests that perceptions of difficulties in bonding may temporally precede and precipitate PPD symptoms (Hiraoka et al., 2024;Ohara et al., 2017). Specifically, in a sample of 433 women followed from pregnancy through 18 months postpartum, Hiraoka et al. (2024) found that mothers' reported bond predicted subsequent PPD symptoms. ...

Relationship between maternal depression and bonding failure: A prospective cohort study of pregnant women
  • Citing Article
  • May 2017

Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences

... The PBQ is a widely used screening tool that can assist in identifying bonding issues between mothers and their infants [13]. It is easy to administer and has good psychometric components with Cronbach's alphas ranging from 0.64 to 0.95 [1,8,12,13] The PBQ has been validated in many languages including Spanish (3), Flemish [1], Japanese [8,14,15], and Tamil [16]. The PBQ is also considered a reliable measure of mother-infant bonding with Cronbach's alpha in previous studies ranging from 0.64 to 0.95 [8,12,13]. ...

Validation and factor analysis of mother-infant bonding questionnaire in pregnant and postpartum women in Japan

BMC Psychiatry

... In contrast, adult mothers received assistance from a broader network, including husbands, mothers, mothers-in-law and other family members. Consequently, women with fewer significant individuals providing social support reported lower levels of support (Morikawa et al. 2015). The limited availability of support sources, compounded by prolonged restrictive measures during the pandemic, likely reduced adolescents' access to social support. ...

Relationship between social support during pregnancy and postpartum depressive state: A prospective cohort study

... Since its creation, the EPDS has been verified against clinical diagnoses in more than 60 languages [10], and it is recognized as the most widely used and thoroughly validated tool for screening depression in pregnant and postpartum women [11]. Although the EPDS was created as a unidimensional measure, many studies [12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30] have examined its factor structure using exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and/or confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Presious studies of EPDS factor structures supported different types of factor structure, including one-, two-, and three-factor structures. ...

Factor Structure of the Japanese Version of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale in the Postpartum Period