From 2000 to 2015, the rate of depression diagnoses among women
hospitalized for the delivery of a child rose seven-fold, from 4.1
cases per 1,000 patients to 28.7 per 1,000, the study found.
The study wasn't designed to determine what caused the spike in
diagnoses. It "could be the result of a true increase in cases of
depression over the time period, better recognition of depression,
or improved diagnoses after screening and assessment," said lead
study author Sarah Haight, a researcher with the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
"Generally speaking, it's important for patients to know that
depression - including perinatal and postpartum depression - is
common and treatable," Haight said by email. "It's also important to
know that it doesn't feel the same for everyone."
During pregnancy and the postpartum period, depression affects about
eight percent to 13 percent of mothers, Haight and colleagues note
in Obstetrics & Gynecology.
Depression during pregnancy is tied to an increased risk of poor
nutrition, alcohol and drug use, obstetric complications and preterm
births. It can also affect children's mental and emotional health
and motor development, the study team writes.
By the end of the study, depression diagnosis rates were lowest in
Hawaii and Nevada, at less than 14 cases for every 1,000 patients.
Rates were highest in Vermont, Minnesota, Oregon, and Wisconsin, at
more than 31 cases for every 1,000 patients.
In 2015, depression diagnosis rates were highest among mothers 35
and older, women with health coverage through public insurance
programs like Medicaid, and white mothers.
This could reflect differences among mothers from different
backgrounds as well as bias among providers, said Erika Forbes, a
researcher at the University of Pittsburgh, in Pennsylvania, who
wasn't involved in the study.
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"Women from different ethnic, socioeconomic, or generational
backgrounds might describe or experience depressive symptoms
differently, and anyone assessing depression should have awareness
of that," Forbes said by email. "Furthermore, medical professionals
assessing the women in this study might have been more inclined to
think that white, non-Latinx women or women over 35 are suffering
from depression, thereby missing it in women with different
characteristics."
The study may have underestimated the number of women with
depression right after delivery, researchers acknowledge. This is
due in part to the lack of data from some U.S. states, the lack of
universal depression screening for new mothers and the study's
reliance on hospital billing records to identify depression cases.
Even so, the results mirror a rise in depression diagnoses in the
general population, said Myrna Weissman, a researcher at Columbia
University in New York City who wasn't involved in the study.
"Women are twice as vulnerable to depression as men, and childbirth
with rapid changes in hormones and rapid psychosocial life changes
increase vulnerability to depression," Weissman said by email.
Mild mood swings are normal during pregnancy and soon after
delivery, but mood changes that persist more than a day or two or
interfere with daily activities and relationships are not normal,
Weissman said. Ideally, all women should be screened for depression
during pregnancy, and women who are depressed or at high risk should
get treatment.
"Postpartum blues refers to a relatively short period of mild levels
of increased sadness, anxiety, and related symptoms that follow
delivery . . . and typically go away within a week," said David
Bridgett of Northern Illinois University in DeKalb.
"If women experience symptoms for longer than a few weeks, or
symptoms are very severe, it may be indicative of postpartum
depression and they should consult a health or mental health care
provider," Bridgett said by email.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2w4RdTP Obstetrics & Gynecology, online May
9, 2019.
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