Risk factors and predictive signs of postpartum depression

  • Service de Santé de la Jeunesse ROR
  • Service Médico-pédagogique, Office de la Jeunesse, Département de l'Instruction Publique, Geneva, Switzerland.

Journal of Affective Disorders, 49(3), 167-180

DOI 10.1016/s0165-0327(97)00110-9 PMID 9629946

Abstract

Background

Depressed new mothers usually do not seek and therefore do not receive any psychiatric help.

Methods

In order to assess predictive signs of postpartum depression (PPD), an unselected sample of 570 women were seen by midwives during their pregnancy, using a questionnaire elaborated by ourselves and Derogatis' Hopkins Symptom Checklist. Three months after delivery each new mother was examined again by the same midwife using Cox' Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale. The medical files were also examined.

Results

Of the new mothers, 58 (10.2%) suffered from PPD. Most significant factors were socio-professional difficulties, multiparity, deleterious life events, depressive mood prior to delivery, early mother-child separation and negative birth experience. The coping abilities of the depressed mother were decreased and her vulnerability to new stress factors increased.

Conclusion

It is possible to detect women at risk for PPD already during pregnancy. We therefore elaborated a very simple, short predictive scale which is in the process of validation.

Limitation

Protective factors still have to be studied.

CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Knowledge of these factors should help all caregivers to recognize, during pregnancy, women at risk for PPD, in order to initiate preventive and/or therapeutic measures.

Topics

risk factors predictive signs postpartum depression, postpartum depression prediction during pregnancy screening, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale three months postpartum, Hopkins Symptom Checklist pregnancy depression prediction, depressive mood prior delivery postpartum depression risk, multiparity life events postpartum depression predictors, early mother-child separation postpartum depression risk, Righetti-Veltema postpartum depression predictive scale, negative birth experience postpartum mood disorder, socio-professional difficulties postpartum depression vulnerability, prenatal screening postpartum depression prevention midwives
PMID 9629946 9629946 DOI 10.1016/s0165-0327(97)00110-9 10.1016/s0165-0327(97)00110-9

Cite this article

Righetti-Veltema, M., Conne-Perréard, E., Bousquet, A., & Guzman Manzano, J. M. (1998). Risk factors and predictive signs of postpartum depression. *Journal of affective disorders*, *49*(3), 167-180. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0165-0327(97)00110-9

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