Which statements regarding the prevalence of perinatal mental health problems are accurate

Which statements regarding the prevalence of perinatal mental health problems are accurate

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Which statements regarding the prevalence of perinatal mental health problems are accurate

Which statements regarding the prevalence of perinatal mental health problems are accurate

Under a Creative Commons license

Open access

HIGHLIGHTS

The prevalence of perinatal depression in Italy is strongly associated with economic disadvantages.

Early procedures to evaluate socioeconomic status and the provision of economical support for mothers might reduce the prevalence of perinatal depression and its direct and indirect costs

Abstract

Background: Perinatal depression is a widespread and burdensome mental disorder. The objectives of this study were to assess the prevalence of both antenatal and postnatal depression in a large sample of women in Italy and to analyse their association with sociodemographic and socioeconomic factors.

Methods: Cross-sectional data from eleven healthcare centres located throughout Italy (2017–2018) were analysed (n = 1471). Depressive disorder was assessed with the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), and sociodemographic and socioeconomic factors were also measured. Prevalences by perinatal period and by sociodemographic and socioeconomic factors were estimated, and their associations were evaluated using logistic regression models. All analyses were stratified by perinatal period: antenatal (i.e., from conception to delivery) vs. postnatal (i.e., the nine months after delivery).

Results: With a cut-off score set at 12 points, the prevalence of perinatal depression was 6.4% during pregnancy and 19.9% in the postnatal period, and the odds ratio for postpartum vs. antepartum depression was 3.65 (2.56–5.39). High economic status was associated with an approximate fivefold reduction in odds of depression in the antenatal period (ORa: 0.23, 95%CI: 0.10-0.54) and about a sixfold reduction in the postnatal period (ORa: 0.15, 95%CI: 0.05-0.45).

Limitations: The data were cross-sectional. The EPDS has a sensitivity of 55.6%.

Conclusion: The prevalence of perinatal depression in Italy is strongly associated with socioeconomic disadvantages. Early procedures to evaluate socioeconomic status and the provision of economical support for mothers might reduce the prevalence of perinatal depression and its direct and indirect costs.

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© 2020 università degli studi di brescia. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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Which statements regarding the prevalence of perinatal mental health problems are accurate

Which statements regarding the prevalence of perinatal mental health problems are accurate

Under a Creative Commons license

Open access

Highlights

First mixed-methods review of adolescent perinatal mental health in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa.

Identifies individual and systemic risk factors for mental ill-health for AGYW.

Explores local conceptualisations of perinatal mental health important to AGYW.

Finds lack of interventions for perinatal AGYW in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa.

Advocates for high-quality mixed-methods research beyond measuring mental disorders.

Abstract

Despite the contribution of mental ill-health to perinatal morbidity and mortality, the experiences of adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in low- and middle-income countries remain overlooked. This review explores potential intersecting vulnerabilities for perinatal mental health to identify the prevalence, risk factors, interventions, and implications for health services and future research.

We searched mixed-methods English-language studies in four databases (MEDLINE, PsycInfo, Global Health, Embase) published between January 1, 2000 and April 30, 2022 reporting age-disaggregated data on the prevalence, risk factors, and interventions for AGYW's mental health during pregnancy through one year postpartum (quantitative) and/or the mental health experiences of AGYW in the perinatal period (qualitative).

Our search yielded 3205 results, of which 48 met the inclusion criteria. Both regions observe a paucity of robust evidence and intervention evaluations, particularly South Asia. While meta-analysis was infeasible due to study heterogeneity, quantitative studies do identify individual-level risk factors for perinatal depression. Qualitative studies emphasise stigma's impact, among other societal-level social risk factors, on diverse perinatal mental health outcomes of importance to AGYW themselves. Rigorous evaluations of interventions are lacking bar two protocols with forthcoming results.

Evidence gaps persist concerning prevalence of outcomes beyond depression and implications of AGYW's perinatal experiences including pregnancy/perinatal loss and obstetric and postpartum complications. High-quality research, including comparable prevalence and multi-method evidence identifying risk and protective factors and promising interventions is urgently needed to improve adolescent wellbeing in the perinatal period.

A key strength of this review is our assessment of available evidence for both regions. In doing so, we address a critical blind spot of prior reviews that focused either on adult perinatal mental health in low- and middle-income countries, or on AGYW perinatal mental health in high-income settings but neglected the intersection of these potential vulnerabilities for these high-burden, low-resource contexts.

Keywords

Adolescent

Mental health

Pregnancy

Postpartum

South Asia

Sub-Saharan Africa

LMIC

Perinatal

Data availability

No data was used for the research described in the article.

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© 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

What is the most common perinatal mental illness?

Depression is the most prevalent mental illness in the perinatal period, with around 10 to 14% of mothers affected during pregnancy or after the birth of a baby.

How common is perinatal mental health?

Perinatal mental health (PMH) problems are those which occur during pregnancy or in the first year following the birth of a child. Perinatal mental illness affects up to 27% of new and expectant mums and covers a wide range of conditions.

What causes perinatal mental illness?

Nobody knows exactly why they happen. This includes mental health problems you develop while pregnant or after giving birth, known as 'perinatal' mental health problems. Some perinatal mental health problems have clearer causes. For example, difficult experiences while giving birth can cause postnatal PTSD.

Why are monoamine oxidase inhibitors MAOIs contraindicated in pregnant clients?

The one exception is monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs), which are not used during pregnancy. Animal studies have implicated them in congenital anomalies and there is the potential for hypertensive crisis when MAOIs are combined with tocolytic agents to delay labor [6].