I’m a survivor of two life-threatening postpartum depressions. At the time of my illnesses, there was no help for me. The great news is that, if you’re suffering from depression in pregnancy or postpartum or know someone who is, there’s help now. For the last 20 years my mission has been to educate medical and mental health professionals, and work directly with women and their families around the world to make sure they don’t suffer the way my family and I did. I’ve worked with over 15,000 women, and I’ve never met one who did not fully recover when given proper help.
Women are most vulnerable to mood disorders during pregnancy and the postpartum period. If depression or anxiety is going to surface, it typically happens at this time. Postpartum depression (ppd) is one of six postpartum mood disorders and is the most common, affecting about 15 percent of mothers around the world. The primary cause for ppd is thought to be the huge hormonal drop after the baby is delivered. This hormone shift then affects the neurotransmitters (brain chemicals). There are also psychosocial factors such as moving, illness, poor partner support, financial hardship, and social isolation that will negatively affect the woman’s emotional state. If the normal Baby Blues don’t go away within two weeks, it is considered then to be ppd. The condition often worsens if the mother doesn’t receive help. Although the onset of ppd is usually gradual, it can be rapid and may occur immediately after delivery. Ppd can begin any time during the first year postpartum. It is extremely important to treat ppd, because if it goes untreated, the symptoms may become chronic. Twenty-five percent of mothers untreated for ppd remain depressed after one year. Ppd can occur after the birth of any child, not just the first. Once a woman has had one occurrence, she is high risk for another after a subsequent birth. Common symptoms are excessive worry, anger, feelings of guilt, sadness, hopelessness, sleep problems, uneasiness around the baby, poor concentration, loss of pleasure, decreased sex drive, and changes in appetite. Although there are factors that make some women high risk, no one is immune. Risk factors include: 50 to 80 % chance of ppd if there was a previous ppd, depression or anxiety during pregnancy, personal or family history of depression/anxiety, abrupt weaning, social isolation or poor support (especially poor partner support), history of mood problems with her menstrual cycle, mood changes while taking a birth control pill, or health problems with the mother or baby.
There are warning signs for which professionals, family, and friends can watch. She may need help if she exhibits some of these behaviors: misses her doctor appointments, worries excessively about her health or the health of the baby, looks unusually tired, requires a support person to accompany her to appointments, loses or gains a lot of weight, has physical complaints without any apparent cause, has poor milk production, evades questions about herself, cries easily, shows discomfort being with her baby, is not willing to let another person care for the baby, loses her appetite, cannot sleep at night when her baby is sleeping, and expresses concern that her baby does not like her. Warning signs in the baby include excessive weight gain or loss, delayed cognitive or language development, decreased responsiveness to the mother, and breastfeeding problems.
There are many important reasons why a new mother with ppd should receive help as soon as possible. If she remains untreated, there is an increased risk of her child(ren) developing psychiatric disturbances. There is a potential for child abuse or neglect, an increased risk for the woman to develop chronic depression or relapse, and there is a negative impact on the marriage and on all the family relationships.
The serious consequences of untreated maternal depression on children have been studied extensively. Infants with depressed mothers often weigh less, vocalize less, have fewer facial expressions and higher heart rates. They may be less active, slower to walk, fussier and less responsive to others. Toddlers with depressed moms are at higher risk for affective disorders. Studies show an increase in poor peer relationships, poor self-control, neurological delays and attention problems. Their symptoms mimic the mom’s depressed behavior. At 36 months, children with depressed mothers are often less cooperative and more aggressive. They also exhibit less verbal comprehension, lower expressive language skills, more problem behaviors and they perform poorly on measures of school readiness. Only one to two months of exposure to severe maternal depression increases the child’s risk to develop depression by age 15.
The recovery plan should include support (both personal and professional), specific nutrition which fights depression, a few hours of uninterrupted nighttime sleep (breastfeeding moms can do this too), medication if necessary, and regular breaks for herself. If her depression is so severe that she cannot exercise, just going outside, standing up straight, breathing deeply and getting some sunshine can help her. Since each woman’s circumstances and symptoms differ, it is important for each to receive an individual assessment and wellness plan. For instance, one may need more uninterrupted sleep at night and breaks during the day, and another may require more social support and thyroid balancing.
One thing is sure – it is possible for each woman to regain her old self (or even a better self) and achieve 100% wellness when provided proper help. The earlier she receives help, the faster she recovers and the better her prognosis. The sooner a new mom starts enjoying her life, the better it is for her whole family.
Although not caused, of course, by reproductive hormones, new fathers also experience depression at the rate of at least 10 percent. Their symptoms differ from the fluctuating moods that moms with ppd exhibit. Fathers seem to have more tension and short-temperedness as their main symptoms, accompanied with some fear, anger, frustration, and feelings of helplessness. Dads with postpartum depression are often concerned about their partners, disrupted family life, and finances. They typically have increased expectations for themselves and confusion about their new role.
The strongest predictor of whether a new dad will become depressed postpartum is the presence of ppd in the mother. A father whose partner has ppd has between a 24 and 50 percent risk of developing depression after the baby is born. The onset of his ppd is usually later then the onset of ppd in the mother. In Chapter 16 of Postpartum Depression For Dummies I discuss why partners, if they aren’t receiving adequate help themselves, sometimes become depressed as the moms recover.
When fathers suffer from depression after the baby is born, their baby boys are negatively affected the most. These boys have been found to have twice as many behavioral problems in their early years as other children without depressed fathers.
Often dads contact me directly for help through www.drshosh.com or they go to www.postpartumdads.org or www.postpartum.net/fathers.html for further information. What’s most important for kids is that both the mom and the dad are healthy and happy.
Shoshana Bennett, Ph.D. ©
Clinical Psychologist
Author, Postpartum Depression For Dummies
http://www.DrShosh.com
Symptoms becoming the Diseases.
Posted: Fri., April 11, 2008, 09:34 am
The Myth of Mental Illness
The book The Myth of Mental Illness Foundations of a Personal Conduct was published in 1974 and is now in a revised addition. The author of the book Thomas S. Szasz. M.D. was a prominent psychiatrist who provided great insight into the medical models used in psychiatry. He goes into great length describing Freud's theory on hysteria. I don't know how many of you know that Freud, who caused great human sufferage with his ridiculous theories, was raped by his nanny as a child and went on to have sex with his patients as a part of their treatment. Seems to me the father of psychiatry was a deeply troubled man. Back to my point. Or maybe that is my point. Who are these people who treat us when we seek out help. Are they any less troubled at any particular time in their lives than we are. How many psychiatrist and therapists do you think are taking the same medications they are prescribing. I heard an interview on NPR the other day with a psychiatrist who recently had a book published entitled Comfortably Numb. His book is about the over prescribing of psychiatric medications. During the interview he discussed the onset in college of the condition he suffers from OCD. I was not aware of some of the intrusive kind of thought those that suffer from this condition experience. He took prozac for many years and most recently change to another drug. He said his condition is under control. I think it's time we took a hard look at this most unique area of medicine. I say unique because where else in medicine can physician diagnose you with a major disorder just by having a conversation with you about your family history and your symptoms. It's great paying job and all you have to do these days is write prescriptions and see your patients once in a while to make sure they are still alive or have not killed someone as result of the side effects of the drugs they put you on that result in the marketplace after a few months of tests by drug companies who fund their own studies.
Did you know that psychiatry was established in the 1800's but endocrinology did not become a recognized science until the early 1950's. Isn't there some moral behind the concept of putting the cart before the horse that might provide some insight into how psychiatry could have gone on this long without anyone questioning the effect that reproductive hormones could have on the symptoms used to diagnosis mental illness. Let's just look at pregnancy as an example since this is a time in human life when the most significant hormone changes occur. I mean we actually grow human life in our wombs. Nothing less than a miracle I say but during this time in a woman's reproductive life is the time when she will most likely end up in psychiatric care. Did you know the highest rate of psychiatric hospitalizations occur as a result of pregnancy. Interesting isn't it.
So back to the book. Here you have a book written in 1974 that clearly questions the foundation which psychiatry was built on. During pregnancy women experience every symptoms which is associated with the diagnosis of almost every mental illness. They think it's a hormone related condition but they're not sure. I mean the entire medical community is not sure. The reason they don't know is because when psychiatry was established they removed the brain from the body.
The foundation of psychiatry is based on personal conduct. The foundations of the endocrine system are the hormones and glands. As the body's chemical messengers, hormones transfer information and instructions from one set of cells to another. Many different hormones move through the bloodstream, but each type of hormone is designed to affect only certain cells.
I need you help. I am confused. It seems so simple to me. If you put the cart before the horse and psychiatry is the cart and endocrinology is the horse, then doesn't that mean the foundation of psychiatry is based on a false foundation.
Did you know that the research that is done in the area of women's hormonal health is done in psychiatry not by reproductive endocrinologist. Did you know that recent research that has all those nueroscientists all excited is related to the effect of reproductive hormones on conditions such as depression. Well, I am not so excited because I changes my whole life because of something I knew but could not prove because there were never any studies done. Post partum depression and psychosis are hormonal events not psychiatric disorders.
Be Well. The tides is about to change.
Posted: Tue., April 29, 2008, 05:41 am
ppd
Posted: Sat., April 12, 2008, 06:26 am
Your are very right about that.
Hypothyroidism and Hyperthyroidism are too conditions that have many many symptoms that show up in PPD and PPP. They are depression, anger, anxiety, delusions and hallucinations, to name a few, which most women are unaware of.
Unfortunately, until we are treated as individuals not like cattle by the medical community women will still be told that their test are normal if we fall into the range they use to determine where our thyroid and reproductive hormone levels fall. I have tried to find out how they came to use these levels. I think possibly they must done on Men, Monkeys or Mice because they certainly did not determine these levels on women.
We all need to support natural compounding pharmacies because they treat people by symptoms and adjusting hormone levels naturally accordingly.
It takes more time but it's certainly worth it not to end up taking drugs that cause cancer and every other disease known to man.
Everything in life goes cycles. We are headed back to where we were 100 years ago in medicine. A time before the FDA ruled that drugs had to be patented. Holistic treatments are not patentable.
Modern Medicine is going to go through dramatic change in the coming years.
Be Well. The tide is about to change.
Posted: Thu., May 8, 2008, 08:34 am
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