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The Recognition & Treatment of Postpartum Depression

The Recognition & Treatment of Postpartum Depression. Johna M Bott Eileen Van Dyke 3/23/06. PPD. Characterized by despair, sadness, anxiety, fears, compulsive thoughts, feelings of inadequacy, loss of libido, fatigue, & dependency Affects upwards of 20% of women after childbirth

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The Recognition & Treatment of Postpartum Depression

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  1. The Recognition & Treatment of Postpartum Depression Johna M Bott Eileen Van Dyke 3/23/06

  2. PPD • Characterized by despair, sadness, anxiety, fears, compulsive thoughts, feelings of inadequacy, loss of libido, fatigue, & dependency • Affects upwards of 20% of women after childbirth • Major health problem that threatens the family unit as a whole

  3. Postpartum psychosis • Emergency that requires immediate hospitalization • Presents with mania, psychotic thoughts, severe depression • Rare occurring in 1-2 deliveries out of a thousand

  4. Why do we care? • Affects entire family unit, not just the mother • One mother described PPD as being buried alive with no chance of clawing to the surface • While mom is debilitated, child’s cognitive and social development suffers then & potentially later on in life with the development of conduct & attention disorders • Fathers also affected by stress put on marriage

  5. PPD screening is not being done

  6. Screening • Approximately 50% of PPD cases go undiagnosed • Although family physicians believe PPD is serious, identifiable, and treatable, screening is still not standard clinical practice in the US • Clinical signs are often not apparent unless screened for • Screening tools are out there & some are even specific for PPD

  7. Excuses • OB screens for that • Pediatricians screen for that at well baby visits • There are too many tools out there, I don’t know which one to use • The tools are too complex • Is that my job?

  8. Risk Factors • Prenatal depression • Totally independent of time • Any depression during pregnancy was discovered to be a significant predictor

  9. Risk Factors • Child care stress • Childbirth itself is a traumatic stressful event that makes the mother more vulnerable to other stressors • Any stressful event involving the care of the newborn, including the temperament of the baby which may be fussy, irritable, and difficult to console • Unhealthy infants

  10. Risk Factors • Support or lack there of • Social, emotional, and instrumental support is very important for new mothers and either perceiving a lack of it or actually having a lack of it can be very detrimental

  11. Risk Factors • Life stress • The number of both positive and negative stressful life events that occur during pregnancy and the postpartum period

  12. Risk Factors • Prenatal anxiety • Marital dissatisfaction • History of previous depression • Affective illness or previous PPD episode

  13. Medical Problems with Related Sx • Transient hypothyroidism • Anemia • Diabetes • Other endocrine disorders • Abuse situations • Infection

  14. Treatment Options • Individual psychotherapy • Personalized care • Scheduling flexibility • Group therapy • Not for everyone • Compliance issue with scheduling conflicts • Need adequate # to participate

  15. Treatment Options • Pharmacologic treatment • Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) • All antidepressants are secreted in breast milk • Continued at least six months to ensure complete remission • Complementary or alternative treatments • Bright-light therapy, exercise, massage therapy, & chronobiological therapies, such as wake therapy

  16. Treatment Options • Controversial therapies • Progesterone or estrogen injections • Hospitalization • Risk of suicide or infanticide • Antipsychotics • Electroconvulsive therapy

  17. Available Screening Tools • The Beck Depression Inventory • The Bromley Postnatal Depression Scale • The Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale • The General Health Questionnaire • The Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology • The Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale • The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale • The Postpartum Depression Screening Scale

  18. The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale • One of the best known screening scales for PPD • Measures emotional and cognitive symptoms of PPD • Ten items scored from 0 to 3 • Only somatic sx taken into account is sleeping difficulties • Available in multiple languages

  19. The Postpartum Depression Screening Scale • Measures 7 dimensions of PPD including sleeping/eating disturbances, anxiety/insecurity, emotional liability, cognitive impairment, loss of self, guilt/shame, & contemplating harming oneself • 35 items • Excellent sensitivity & specificity

  20. Conclusion • The general consensus is that both the EPDS & the PDSS are good screening scales for PPD • Practitioners may form personal preferences due to length or detail of questions • Most important thing is that a screening method is used

  21. Summary • PPD is real & very serious • Talking about PPD openly might make it less scary, educate the patient & their family • Screening at every visit is the key to the difficult recognition that is due to drastic differences in symptoms from patient to patient • Prompt treatment with effective follow-up

  22. References • Andrews-Fike C. A review of postpartum depression. Primary Care Companion Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 1999; 1: 9-14 • Beck CT, Gable RK. Comparative analysis of the performance of the postpartum depression screening scale with two other depression instruments. Nursing Research. 2001 July/August; 50(4): 242-250 • Beck CT, Gable RK. Further validation of the postpartum depression screening scale. Nursing Research. 2001 May/June; 50(3): 155-164 • Beck CT, Indman P. The many faces of postpartum depression. JOGNN. 2005 September/October; 34(5): 569-576 • Benvenuti P, Ferrara M, Niccolai C, Valoriani V, Cox J. The Edinburgh postnatal depression scale: validation for and Italian sample. Journal of Affective Disorders. 1999; 53: 137-141 • Boyd RC, Le HN, Somberg R. Review of screening instruments for postpartum depression. Archives of Women’s Mental Health. 2005; 8: 141-153 • Dalton K, Holton WM. Depression after childbirth: how to recognize, treat, and prevent postnatal depression. 3rd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1996 • Dennis C-L, Creedy D. Psychosocial and psychological interventions for preventing postpartum depression. The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2004, Issue 4. Art. No.: CD001134.pub2. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD001134.pub2 • Edhborg M, Friberg M, Lundh W, Widstrom AM. “Struggling with life”. Narratives from women with signs of postpartum depression. Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. 2005 Aug; 33(4): 261-267 • Hanna B, Jarman H, Savage S. The clinical application of three screening tools for recognizing post-partum depression. International Journal of Nursing Practice. 2004; 10: 72-9 • Horowitz JA, Goodman JH. Identifying and treating postpartum depression. JOGNN. 2005 March/April; 34(2): 264-273 • Lee DTS, Yip ASK, Chan SSM, Tsiu MHY, Wong WS, Chung TKH. Postdelivery screening for postpartum depression. Psychosomatic Medicine. 2003; 65: 357-361 • O’Hara MW, Cohen LS. Postpartum depression: causes and consequences. New York: Springer-Verlag; 1995 • Seehusen DA, Baldwin LM, Runkle GP, Clark G. Are family physicians appropriately screening for postpartum depression? JABFP. 2005 March/April; 18(2): 104-112 • Stowe ZN, Hostetter AL, Newport J. The onset of postpartum depression: implications for clinical screening in obstetrical and primary care. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 2005 Feb; 192(2): 522-6 • Whiffen VE. Screening for postpartum depression: a methodological note. Journal of Clinical Psychology. 1988 May; 44(3): 367-371

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