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Study finds maternal depression on the rise in poor countries

Maternal depression on the rise, study finds
  • A study by Flinders University public health researchers found rising levels of reported antenatal depression.
  • Women in poor countries struggle with many health issues in pregnancy and childbirth, but little attention is given to antenatal depression.
  • Antenatal depression has detrimental effects on the physical, psychological, mental, and overall wellbeing of mothers and newborn babies.

A study by Flinders University public health researchers found rising levels of reported antenatal depression in low and medium-income countries and recommends more services are urgently needed – particularly in low-income economies.

According to the report, women in these countries struggle with many health issues in pregnancy and childbirth, but little attention is given to antenatal depression – which is on the rise in many developing countries.

“Depression during pregnancy is often believed to be an issue of developed countries,” says biostatistician Abel Fekadu Dadi, who led the systematic review and analysis of antenatal depression levels in low and middle-income countries.

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“From the study, we found 34% and 22.7% of pregnant women in low and middle-income countries respectively had depression symptoms during pregnancy,” says Mr Dadi, who is also affiliated with the Institute of Public Health at the University of Gondar, Ethiopia.

Moreover, compared to non-depressed pregnant women, depressed women had respective rates of 2.41 times and 66% higher risk of preterm birth and low birth weight.

“We found that antenatal depression is highly prevalent and increases over the duration of pregnancy. We also noted increases in prevalence over the last 10 years.”

According to the International Journal of Mental Health Systems, perinatal maternal depression is common and under-treated in many sub-Saharan African countries, including Nigeria.

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In Nigeria, 10–20% of consecutive attendees in primary care have depression, with reported rates of perinatal depression from 10 to 30%.

Antenatal depression has detrimental effects on the physical, psychological, mental, and overall wellbeing of mothers and newborn babies, he says, stressing more must be done to raise awareness with health practitioners and policy-makers in developing economies.

It is vital for these governments to address women’s mental health issues before and during pregnancy to improve health outcomes for both mothers and babies, and contribute to socio-economic development and Sustainable Development Goals,” says co-author Associate Professor Lillian Mwanri, from the Flinders College of Medicine and Public Health.

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  • One in three (34%) and one in five (22.7%) pregnant women in low-and middle-income countries, respectively had depression.
  • Having depression during pregnancy increased the risk of low birth weight and preterm births. Severe depression is known to directly lead to suicide in women during pregnancy or after birth – and to neonatal, infant and child mortality.
  • A poor obstetric history, previous episodes of common mental disorders, poor social support, financial difficulties, a history of exposure to violence (during pregnancy or earlier), and unsatisfactory relationships were factors that increased chances of depression.
  • Low-cost interventions such as psychotherapy services at maternity clinics – and relationship and partner support advice – are among the social and health system interventions badly needed in these countries.

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