Maternal depression and child development Flashcards
What is the prevalence of postpartum depression?
13%
What are the postpartum blues?
a relatively common emotional disturbance with crying, confusion, mood lability, anxiety and depressed mood. The symptoms appear during the first week postpartum, last for a few hours to a few days and have few negative sequelae
What is postpartum psychosis?
to a severe disorder beginning within four weeks postpartum, with delusions, hallucinations and gross impairment in functioning. Symptoms must last at least 1m and result in impairment of symptoms
What is postpartum depression?
depression begins in or extends into the postpartum period and core features include dysphoric mood, fatigue, anorexia, sleep disturbances, anxiety, excessive guilt and suicidal thoughts. The diagnosis requires that symptoms be present for at least one month and result in some impairment in the woman’s functioning
What are risk factors for postpartum depression?
- Hx of mood disorders
- Depression symptoms during the pregnancy
- FamHx psychiatric d/o
- Negative life events
- Poor marital relationships
- Special needs infant
- Medically “fragile” infant
- Lack of social support
- Drug abuse
- Personal and family psychopathology
What are consequences of maternal depression prenatally?
Inadequate prenatal care, poor nutrition, higher preterm birth, low birth weight, pre-eclampsia and spontaneous abortion
What are consequences of maternal depression to the infant?
Behavioral: Anger and protective style of coping, passivity, withdrawal, self-regulatory behaviour, and dysregulated attention and arousal
Cognitive: lower cognitive performance
What are consequences of maternal depression to the toddler?
Behavioral: Passive noncompliance, less mature expression of autonomy, internalizing and externalizing problems, and lower interaction
Cognitive: Less creative play and lower cognitive performance
What are consequences of maternal depression to the school aged child?
Behavioral: Impaired adaptive functioning, internalizing and externalizing problems, affective disorders, anxiety disorders and conduct disorders
Academic: ADHD and lower IQ scores
What are consequences of maternal depression to the adolescent?
Behavioral: Affective disorders (depression), anxiety disorders, phobias, panic disorders, conduct disorders, substance abuse and alcohol dependence
Academic: ADHD, LD
What are contextual risk factors for worsening parental depression and maladaptive parenting?
- Marital conflict
- Stressful life events
- Limited social support
- Poverty
- Lower social class
- Lower maternal education
What is the role of fathers
Can buffer effects of maternal depression in the child
What characteristics make the child more resilient
- Female
- Easy going and robust temperament
- Social and cognitive skills to receive positive attention from adults other than depressed mother
- Understanding of maternal depression
What pharmacotherapy options are available?
SSRI and TCA are effective and may be used during pregnancy and lactation
What behavioral options are available?
Social support and home visiting interventions are successful in improving mood
Family therapy can be every effective
Psychotherapy can be effective
St. John’s Wort can be effective for mild to moderate depression