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Prenatal ambient air pollution and maternal depression at 12 months postpartum in the MADRES pregnancy cohort.

Theresa M BastainThomas ChavezRima HabreIxel Hernandez-CastroBrendan GrubbsClaudia M Toledo-CorralShohreh F FarzanNathana LurveyDeborah LernerSandrah P EckelFred LurmannIsabel LagomasinoCarrie Breton
Published in: Environmental health : a global access science source (2021)
In a low-income cohort consisting of primarily Hispanic/Latina women in urban Los Angeles, we found that prenatal ambient air pollution, especially mid-pregnancy NO2 and PM2.5, increased the risk of depression at 12 months after childbirth. These results underscore the need to better understand the contribution of modifiable environmental risk factors during potentially critical exposure periods.
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