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Mum-to-be and depressed?

Not a joy for all women


Pregnancy has long been assumed to be a time of expectant joy, at least for women whose pregnancies are planned and who look forward to motherhood. A significant minority — 10 to 20 per cent — suffers moderate to severe depression during pregnancy, which translates to 80,000 women a year in the United States. All too often the problem goes unrecognised by the women and their doctors.

Some depression symptoms — fatigue, change in appetite and lack of energy — overlap normal signs of pregnancy, prompting some women to ignore them. But even when pregnancy-related depression is recognised and acknowledged, women and their doctors can find themselves in a dilemma. After decades of warnings to avoid all manner of drugs, alcohol, nicotine and caffeine, pregnant women are often reluctant to take antidepressants even if their doctors will prescribe them.

New studies examining possible effects of antidepressants on the foetus as well as the risks involved in failing to treat depression during pregnancy are likely to make decisions even harder. A depressed woman is more likely to be delinquent about prenatal care. She may miss doctor appointments, eat and sleep poorly, fail to take vitamins, have difficulty forming a healthy attachment to her unborn child, and experience stress that can expose the foetus to harmful levels of hormones and neurotransmitters.

Untreated depression during pregnancy has been linked to higher rates of miscarriage, stillbirths, premature deliveries, intrauterine growth restriction and low-birth-weight babies.

Finally, depression is unlikely to end once the baby is born. As Dr. Shaila Kulkarni Misri noted in her recent book, "Pregnancy Blues" (Delacorte Press, $23), "If depression goes untreated during pregnancy, it will worsen and more than likely continue postpartum."

Postpartum depression not only robs a woman of the joy of having a new baby, it can seriously impair her ability to nurse and care for the infant. A woman taking antidepressants before becoming pregnant may assume that the safest course is to stop the medication until the baby is born or after she stops nursing. But a study published in The Journal of the American Medical Association found that such an interruption greatly increased the chance that major depression would recur during the pregnancy.

Even stopping treatment only for the first 12 weeks, when the baby's organs are forming, increased the chance of a relapse, the researchers, headed by Dr. Lee S. Cohen, perinatal psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital, found.

Misri calls pregnancy-related depression "an equal-opportunity illness" that can strike any woman, rich or poor.

(Courtesy: New York Times)

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