Postpartum depression is a serious problem among women. Once thought of as a relatively minor phase within the postpartum cycle, it is now known that it can seriously impair the individual woman's ability to function under the stress of new parenthood and can seriously erode the family, at a point of foundational transition. Over the last twenty years doctors and the general public have demonstrated greater knowledge of the problem of postpartum depression through awareness and of coarse research.
According to the British Columbia Reproductive Mental Health Program the prevalence of postpartum depression is relatively high but has risk factors associated with age, social support level and prior history of either previous postpartum depression or other forms of clinical depression.
The most vulnerable time for a woman to develop onset of mood disorders is during the postpartum period. Approximately 12- 16% of women experience depression during the postpartum period. Adolescent mothers will experience depression more frequently. A diagnosis of depression may be missed in the postpartum period because of the demands of caring for a new infant. Changes in sleep, appetite, fatigue and energy are common in both the normal postpartum period and postpartum depression. Approximately 30% of women with a history of depression prior to conceiving will develop postpartum depression. Approximately 50% of women with a history of postpartum depression will develop postpartum depression in a subsequent pregnancy. Emotional disorders during the postpartum period can occur; during labour and delivery, within a few days or weeks of delivery most frequently starting within 6 weeks of delivery or at any time up to one year following the birth. (BC Reproductive Mental Health Program, (2000) http://www.bcrmh.com/disorders/postpartum.htm)
Within such research are clues to the epidemiology, outward symptoms and possible interventions for the problem. This work will analyze those three factors as they relate to the individual and the family and as they apply to the professional. Social support has been found, in much research to be a major contributing factor to maladaptive parenting behavior and many difficulties faced by new parents, especially new mothers. "Endocrine changes, fatigue, and the responsibilities of motherhood are the probable causes of postpartum depression. The mother, unconsciously, resents the baby. Consciously, she is depressed." (Miletich, 1995, p. 50) It has been made clear over the last twenty years of research that postpartum depression does have a clinical cause, clinical solutions such as medication are limited by the pregnancy and nursing phases
Pharmacotherapy during pregnancy has potential teratogenetic risk ( American Academy of Pediatrics, 1994), as most antidepressant medications cross the placenta; the few studies examining their fetal effects have been inconclusive ( Chambers et al., 1996; Pastuszak et al., 1993; Koren, 1994; Nulman et al., 1997). Moreover, medication may carry the risk of behavioral morbidity for the fetus. The fetus develops behavioral responses quite early in gestation. It responds to external sounds from at least twenty weeks, and can produce its own hormonal and other stress responses from mid-gestation ( Glover, 1997). (Weissman, Markowitz & Klerman, 2000, p. 300)
For this reason social support and clinical counseling treatments are often the solution to early intervention and treatment for post partum depression, in its mildest and most severe cases.
Social support is associated with the adaptation to parenthood and positive mother-infant interactions. For example, research has shown that if a woman lacks adequate social support during pregnancy, negative outcomes, such as postpartum depression and insensitive parenting behavior, may follow ( Cutrona, 1984; Crockenberg, 1981). Women who receive support during pregnancy experience more positive mental and physical health outcomes during the labor, delivery, and postpartum periods than women who do not receive support ( Collins, Dunkel- Schetter, Lobel, & Scrimshaw, 1993; Cutrona, 1984). (Goldstein, Diener & Mangelsdorf, 1996, p. 60)
Though pharmacological solutions have been available for the general treatment of depression, for some time the use of such interventions during the time of pregnancy and nursing is, as it should be followed by much skepticism and used only with great care and seriousness. Most modern medications, due to inability to test have unknown effects on the development of the fetus and the young infant. It is for this reason that most individuals and doctors are determined to remove the possibility of complications by simply eliminating the use of medications during pregnancy and immediately following. That time immediately following delivery, from day one postpartum to around two years shows to be the time the individual is at greatest risk for the development of the complications associated with post partum...
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