369; Physical Activity and Perinatal Mental Health in?Women: A Global Umbrella Review and Meta-Meta-Analysis

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Publicado en:European Journal of Public Health vol. 35, no. Supplement_6 (Dec 2025)
Autor principal: Mohr, Elizabeth
Otros Autores: Ludwig-Walz, Helena, Pieper, Dawid, Guthold, Regina, Kaus, Mariebelle, Pachanov, Alexander, Bujard, Martin
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Oxford University Press
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Acceso en línea:Citation/Abstract
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024 7 |a 10.1093/eurpub/ckaf180.366  |2 doi 
035 |a 3280248537 
045 2 |b d20251201  |b d20251231 
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100 1 |a Mohr, Elizabeth  |u Federal Institute For Population Research (BiB), Wiesbaden, Germany 
245 1 |a 369; Physical Activity and Perinatal Mental Health in?Women: A Global Umbrella Review and Meta-Meta-Analysis 
260 |b Oxford University Press  |c Dec 2025 
513 |a Evidence Based Healthcare Journal Article 
520 3 |a EP2.4, e-Poster Terminal 2, September 4, 2025, 11:35 - 12:55 Introduction Worldwide, around one tenth of pregnant women and even more postpartum women experience a mental health problem. Research indicates that physical activity may positively impact perinatal mental health. In recent years, numerous systematic reviews on this topic have been published; however, they have yielded heterogeneous results. Therefore, this umbrella review aims to provide policy and practice with comprehensive evidence on the effect of physical activity interventions on perinatal mental health. Methods 9 databases were searched for systematic reviews with meta-analysis published in the past ten years and focusing on physical activity interventions for perinatal depression and/or anxiety in women. Two authors screened records, extracted data, and conducted the risk of bias assessment (AMSTAR-2). The degree of overlap of primary studies in the reviews was assessed using the Corrected Covered Area approach. Certainty of Evidence was assessed with GRADE. Prospero: CRD42024538941 Results A total of 3,898 studies were retrieved and 19 systematic reviews with meta-analyses were included. The results of the meta-meta-analysis suggest that physical activity has a positive effect on depressive symptoms in the perinatal period (SMD: -0.46; 95%-CI: -0.70; -0.21). This effect is observed across different physical activity intensities and particularly for yoga and mixed activity. Certainty of evidence was graded ‘moderate’. More research on physical activity and perinatal anxiety is needed. Our findings also highlight the need for a greater focus on the needs of underserved communities to ensure equitable interventions for perinatal mental health. Conclusion Physical activity interventions may have a moderately positive effect on women’s perinatal mental health, particularly perinatal depressive symptoms. Their low-threshold nature makes them easy to access, implement, and adjust to the needs of diverse communities. Physical activity should be included in perinatal clinical guidelines as a measure to promote mental health during this crucial period in the life course. 
653 |a Meta-analysis 
653 |a Physical fitness 
653 |a Exercise 
653 |a Intervention 
653 |a Mental health 
653 |a Databases 
653 |a Mental depression 
653 |a Physical activity 
653 |a Anxiety 
653 |a Prenatal depression 
653 |a Systematic review 
653 |a Health problems 
653 |a Methodological problems 
653 |a Uncertainty 
653 |a Women 
653 |a Health status 
653 |a Risk assessment 
653 |a Yoga 
653 |a Mental disorders 
653 |a Mental health services 
653 |a Postpartum women 
653 |a Underserved populations 
653 |a Postpartum depression 
653 |a Clinical practice guidelines 
653 |a Pregnancy 
653 |a Health education 
653 |a Symptoms 
653 |a Perinatal period 
653 |a Postpartum period 
653 |a Life course 
653 |a Social 
700 1 |a Ludwig-Walz, Helena  |u Federal Institute For Population Research (BiB), Wiesbaden, Germany 
700 1 |a Pieper, Dawid  |u Institute for Health Services and Health System Research, Faculty of Health Sciences Brandenburg, Brandenburg Medical School (Theodor Fontane), Rüdersdorf, Germany; Center for Health Services Research, Brandenburg Medical School (Theodor Fontane), Rüdersdorf, Germany 
700 1 |a Guthold, Regina 
700 1 |a Kaus, Mariebelle 
700 1 |a Pachanov, Alexander 
700 1 |a Bujard, Martin 
773 0 |t European Journal of Public Health  |g vol. 35, no. Supplement_6 (Dec 2025) 
786 0 |d ProQuest  |t ABI/INFORM Global 
856 4 1 |3 Citation/Abstract  |u https://www.proquest.com/docview/3280248537/abstract/embedded/9R349J4AAH19K9LJ?source=fedsrch 
856 4 0 |3 Full Text - PDF  |u https://www.proquest.com/docview/3280248537/fulltextPDF/embedded/9R349J4AAH19K9LJ?source=fedsrch