The New York Daily News (8/28, Scotti) reports, “About 21% of new mothers experiencing postpartum mood disorders like depression and anxiety don’t tell their doctors about their symptoms,” researchers found in a study published online Aug. 1 in the Maternal and Child Health Journal.
Psychiatric News (8/25) reported that “46% said that barriers such as stigma and negative perception of therapy made it difficult or impossible to report such symptoms,” researchers reported in a study involving “211 predominantly white, middle-class women who had given birth within the past three years.”
In an opinion piece in the Los Angeles Times’ (8/28) “Daily Pilot,” registered nurse Pamela Pimentel, RN, CEO of MOMS Orange County, and physician Patricia de Marco Centeno, director of consultation-liaison psychiatry and Women’s Mental Health at Hoag Hospital, write, “If you have the opportunity to influence pregnant women, encourage them to participate in maternal mental health screenings and seek treatment for disorders.” Women who are “are pregnant or are considering becoming pregnant, avail yourself of maternal mental health screenings and services.”
Related Links:
— “One in five women suffering from postpartum disorders keeps her symptoms a secret,” Ariel Scotti, New York Daily News, August 28, 2017.