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Working with Families with Perinatal Depression and
Anxiety: Nurturing Families and Nurturing Yourself
Tracey Wingold, LCSWTracey Wingold, LCSW, LLC
Online Mental Health Counseling(804) 316- 9694
SOME QUICK FACTS§ PMADS (Perinatal Mood and Anxiety Disorders) are
caused by a combination of biomedical, internal, and external factors
§ Moms are more at risk if they have a personal or family history, had a traumatic pregnancy or birth, or have little social support
§ PMADs don’t always look like depression! (Anxiety is very common.)
§ PMADs are COMMON and TREATABLE!
Disclaimers
§ Information from this presentation came from a variety of sources. Credit goes to Postpartum Support Virginia, for providing some of the slides, information, and handout
§ Additional information was obtained from The Seleni Institute, an organization that provides training for professionals around perinatal mental health.
§ Other sources are noted within the presentation.§ The self-care checklist is being used with permission. It
was created by “Shari’s berries” (www.berries.com)
ANXIETY and DEPRESSION
Anxiety and/or depression affect up to
1 in 5new or expectant mothers
SOME QUICK FACTS§ PMADS (Perinatal Mood and Anxiety Disorders) are
caused by a combination of biomedical, internal, and external factors
§ Moms are more at risk if they have a personal or family history, had a traumatic pregnancy or birth, or have little social support
§ PMADs don’t always look like depression! (Anxiety is very common.)
§ PMADs are COMMON and TREATABLE!
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Risks of Untreated PMADs
PREGNANCY§ Pregnant women experiencing
PMADs are more likely to have– poor health habits– poor prenatal care– substance abuse
§ Increased risk of negative birth outcomes
– pre-term labor– premature delivery (<37 weeks)– low birth weight– small head circumference– low APGAR scores– NICU admissions
POSTPARTUM§ Depressed mothers are more
likely to have– fewer positive interactions with
their babies– decreased response to cues– breastfeeding issues
§ Increased risk for children to experience
– cognitive/developmental delays– emotional/behavioral problems– substance abuse– psychiatric disorders
Suicide§ Although very rare, suicide is a leading cause of
death among women of childbearing age (CDC)
§ One recent study in Canada found that most suicides occurred between 9-12 months postpartum.
Sources: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hestat/suicide/rates_1999_2014.htm
https://www.seleni.org/advice-support/2018/3/16/what-we-can-do-to-prevent-maternal-suicide
PMADS and Minority Families§ African American and Latina families are at higher risk of
experiencing PMADs.
§ Factors include higher incidences of poverty, violence in relationships, and trauma, which are all risk factors for PMADs.
§ Healthcare disparities and discrimination in healthcare can also cause PMADs to be missed due to lack of screening
§ One study found that AA women describe depression more prevalent through physical symptoms
Source: https://www.seleni.org/advice-support/2018/3/16/pmads-such-as-ppd-and-anxiety-in-african-american-moms?rq=minorities
WHAT YOU MIGHT OBSERVEOverwhelmed
GuiltyMiserable
SadAnxious Angry
Irritable
Increased sensitivityPoor concentration
Tired but cannot sleepIntrusive thoughts
Panic attacksPhysical Symptoms
Lack of attachment to baby
WHAT IS YOUR ROLE?Home visitors have a unique opportunity to assist moms who are struggling, because of your proximity to the family. You have the opportunity to
1.Observe the signs2.Educate (“You are not alone, you are not to blame,
with help you will get well.”)3.Screen (using the EPDS or other screening tool)4.Refer for more help (OB, therapist, psychiatrist)
5.Provide Support (Listen, validate)
WHAT A HOME VISITOR’S ROLE IS NOT
Home visitors do not
§Diagnose§Provide therapy§Give medical advice
(some exception for nurses!)
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What Can You Do?SUPPORT§ Listen actively and without judgement§ Encourage her; point out her strengths and
efforts§ Engage her social support system§ Encourage, and help her plan for, her own
self-care (eating, sleeping, exercise, time off)
What Should I Say and Do?ASKHow are you feeling about being a new mother?How are you coping with the additional stress of a new baby?Are you able to sleep when the baby is sleeping?How is your appetite?Do you have enough energy to do the things you need to do?Do you find yourself crying a lot / all the time?Are you having any thoughts at are scaring you?
SHAREFACT SHEETS
INFORMATION CARDSPATH TO WELLNESS
PSVA WEBSITESUPPORT GROUPS
SAYValidate: I’m sorry you are having a tough time.
Normalize: Lots of new moms have these feelings.
Offer hope: You are going to get well.
ScreeningEdinburgh Postnatal
Depression Scale§ Since 1987, FREE§ 10 questions§ Depression & anxiety§ Question #10§ When
o During pregnancyo At deliveryo First year postpartum
Anxiety /depression are so common that we should screen all new / expectant
mothers
Treatment Options
Self-CareSocial SupportTalk TherapyMedication
Hospitalization
EasyCheap
More InvolvedMore Expensive
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Self Care
TIME OFFNo other job is so challenging
24/7Keeping another person alive
EXERCISELight exercise, Outdoors
Vitamin D + fresh air + changeof scenery + endorphins
SLEEP4-5 hours
uninterrupted
EATEvery time baby eats
High proteinCalories for breastfeeding
Women need to recover from physical & emotional effects of pregnancy & childbirth
Mothering the mother
ResourcesPostpartum Support Virginia
Support for mothers and families§ One-on-one support via phone / email§ 20 FREE peer-led support groups§ Facebook pageResources and information§ Books, websites, doulas§ 160+ Mental health professionalsOutreach and education§ Information cards, Fact Sheets, posters§ Volunteer training sessions§ Information and education sessions
www.postpartumva.org
Postpartum Support Int’lpostpartum.net
Postpartum Progresspostpartumprogress.com
MGH Center for Women’s Mental Healthwww.womensmentalhealth.org
Books by Karen Kleiman. This Isn’t What I Expected: Overcoming
Postpartum Depression
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THE POWER OF REFERRAL§ Know your community providers (therapists,
prescribers, support groups).
§ Provide a WARM HANDOFF if possible.
§ FOLLOW UP to be sure that care is initiated.
§ Be mindful of confidentiality.
NOW, What About YOU?
Self Care and Compassion Fatigue
Self-care is any activity that we do deliberately in order to take care of our mental, emotional, and physical health.
Compassion Fatigue is a state experienced by those helping people in distress. It is an extreme devotion to those being helped to the degree it can cause a secondary traumatic stress for the helper.
§Source: https://psychcentral.com/blog/what-self-care-is-and-what-it-isnt-2/?ref=sssorganicgglunkwn&prid=sbseogglunkwn
Managing Compassion FatigueRediscover that life is larger than the immediate situation, no matter how important it is.§Restart activities that you may have stopped doing as work demands intensified.§Try something different.§Talk about your feelings and needs with a professional, or a trusted friend or family member.§Take a vacation!
* Source – the Konterra Group Knowledge Library, http://www.konterragroup.net/compassion-fatigue-natural-happens-real/
Self Care ChecklistSelf-inventory and goals
Closing Thoughts
§ This is often the first time a woman deals with mental illness
§ Women experiencing PMADs think they are monsters
§ Dads / partners can also experience PMADs§ Mothers, babies, families can recover§ This work is hard for you too! It’s important
to take care of yourself in order to be effective and stay healthy.
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Questions?
Thank you!!