Thursday, September 29, 2016

Depression In Pregnancy Ups Risk of Emotional Problems in Kids

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Depression In Pregnancy Ups Risk of Emotional Problems in Kids

UK researchers have discovered that maternal depression in pregnancy increases the risk of behavioral and emotional problems in children.

This association is especially pronounced in low and middle income countries where interventions such as cognitive behavioral therapy, may not be available.

Depression in pregnancy is thought to affect up to one in five women globally in the late stages of pregnancy and shortly after birth. Depression often presents as a low mood and feelings of hopelessness.

Experts believe it can result from a number of factors including life events such as bereavement, and changes in brain chemistry.

Previous work from a team at Imperial College London suggests depression during pregnancy may affect the development of the baby while in the womb, as well as affecting bonding between mother and child after birth.

Now, the same team have shown that depression or anxiety can reduce the enzyme in the placenta that breaks down the ‘stress hormone’ cortisol, possibly causing more fetal exposure to the hormone.

The fetus may also undergo epigenetic changes under stress, where underlying DNA stays the same but expression of that DNA is altered, perhaps affecting mental health during childhood. 

Investigators explain that much of the research into depression during pregnancy has focused on high income countries. They now argue that the problem is more common in low- and middle-income countries, and hence more resources are now needed in these areas to help expectant and new mothers.

Researchers believe that research is sorely needed in the less well-to-do countries. In addition to research, investigators believe the development of low cost interventions are urgently needed.

Professor Vivette Glover, co-author of the research from theDepartment of Surgery and Cancer at Imperial, said: “Our review of available literature suggests that treating the depression itself is crucial in reducing the risk to the child, as well as for helping the mother.

“It shows targeting specific symptoms of depression by using cognitive behavioral therapy, for example, can be useful in reducing depression and therefore its effect on the child. However, there is a substantial lack of research specific to women in poorer countries, where interventions such as cognitive behavioral therapy may not be available.”

Professor Glover added that in severely deprived regions where there are wars, political violence, food insecurity, and little help after natural disasters, healthcare workers have little time or resources to meet basic physical needs, let alone mental health ones like maternal depression.

The new review, published in The Lancet Psychiatry, examined studies of mental health in children under five years old in low and middle income countries such as Bangladesh and Brazil.

The report highlights the specific mental health requirements of mothers and children in poorer countries that are not necessarily relevant to high-income countries.

Investigators discovered depression in mothers in low- and middle-income countries is common during and just after pregnancy. Moreover, women are more likely than in richer countries to experience intimate partner violence and have little social support.

Furthermore, unintended pregnancies are more common, as are malnourishment, infections, and crowded living conditions.

A mother’s risk for depression is much greater in less affluent countries as risk factors are often more intense. These factors also intensify one another – for example, a malnourished mother or child may have too weak an immune system to fight an infection, exacerbating the mother’s stress which then contributes to depression.

Maternal depression in these countries is also more likely to result in poor nutrition, increased substance use, inadequate antenatal care, pre-eclampsia, low birthweight, preterm delivery, and suicide. 

The authors argue that because of the varying risk factors between different income countries, interventions for poorer countries should focus on the issues that affect these countries specifically. 

They add that mitigating the global burden of maternal depression will require a multi-faceted approach that targets child development, poverty, education, health, and prevention of violence in low- and middle-income countries.

Last week in Melbourne, Professor Glover and colleagues launched a new organization, “The Global Alliance for Maternal Mental Health”, which aims to foster more knowledge about these issues, and to generate more resources to tackle them, around the world. 

Source: Imperial College London



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September 29, 2016 at 01:49AM

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