Poster Session I – A98 SOCIOECONOMIC FACTORS, ETHNICITY, AND EDUCATION IMPACT QUALITY OF LIFE AND MENTAL HEALTH IN PREGNANT IBD PATIENTS
V Srikanth, V Premjeyanth, S Perera, K O’Connor, C Maxwell, T Zenlea, N Griller, S Vigod, V W Huang

TL;DR
This study shows that socioeconomic factors, ethnicity, and education affect mental health and quality of life in pregnant patients with inflammatory bowel disease.
Contribution
The study identifies specific socioeconomic and demographic factors linked to mental health and quality of life in pregnant IBD patients.
Findings
Asian ethnicity is associated with higher depression and lower quality of life in pregnant IBD patients.
Lower educational attainment correlates with worse mental health outcomes in this population.
Higher income is linked to better mental health and quality of life in pregnant IBD patients.
Abstract
The global burden of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is rising, with many diagnoses occurring during reproductive years. IBD patients have a high prevalence of anxiety and depression, which negatively affects disease severity and quality of life (QoL). Socioeconomic (SE) factors may influence this relationship, as social barriers and vulnerabilities are associated with anxiety, depression, and poorer QoL. This study offers insights into SE factors in the context of IBD and pregnancy using patient-reported outcomes. To explore how SE factors affect self-reported anxiety, depression, and IBD-related QoL in pregnant IBD patients. These results are an extension of previously reported findings (PMC11807446). We conducted an anonymous, cross-sectional survey of pregnant IBD patients. Data collected included demographics, SE factors, IBD disease activity (modified Harvey Bradshaw Index…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPregnancy and Medication Impact · Inflammatory Bowel Disease · Maternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum
