dc.description.abstract | For a mother, giving birth to a baby is a very happy event as well as an
event that is heavy, full of challenges and anxiety.Nearly 70% of mothers
experience sadness or baby blues / postpartum blues syndrome, most of the
mothers can recover soon and achieve stability, but 13% of them will experience
postpartum depression. Primiparous mothers are the group most vulnerable to
postpartum depression than multiparous or grandemultipara mothers. Although
the causes of post partum mental disorders are not yet fully understood, pain,
fatigue due to poor sleep quality, anxiety about the ability to care for babies, and
changes in sleep patterns are factors that act as early signals of postpartum blues
symptoms. The aim of this literature review study is to identify the correlation
between sleep quality in postpartum mothers with the incidence of postpartum
blues. The data source used in this study is the electronic database seach engine
ProQuest, PubMed, Research Gate, Sage Pub and Schoolar. In addition, searching
through the bibliography to complete the electronic search. Keywords used to
search for journal articles are sleep quality, postpartum blues, postpartum
depression, postpartum blues factors, and postpartum mothers get 25 articles and
only 10 articles are used which are appropriate through objective analysis, topic
suitability, research methods used, sample size , research ethics, results of each
article, and limitations that occur. The result of the journal review is that the
chances of depression in postpartum mother with poor sleep quality are 3,34 times
(93,3%) higher than postpartum mother with good sleep quality. The conclusion
that there is a relationship between sleep quality in postpartum mothers with the
incidence of postpartum blues. | en_US |