Identifying Perinatal Depression and Anxiety Identifying Perinatal Depression and Anxiety Evidence‐Based Practice in Screening, Psychosocial Assessment, and Management Edited by Jeannette Milgrom and Alan W. Gemmill This edition first published 2015 © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Registered Office John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, UK Editorial Offices 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148‐5020, USA 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford, OX4 2DQ, UK The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, UK For details of our global editorial offices, for customer services, and for information about how to apply for permission to reuse the copyright material in this book please see our website at www.wiley.com/wiley‐blackwell. The right of Jeannette Milgrom and Alan W. Gemmill to be identified as the authors of the editorial material in this work has been asserted in accordance with the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. 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Milgrom, Jeannette, editor. II. Gemmill, Alan, editor. [DNLM: 1. Depression, Postpartum–diagnosis. 2. Anxiety Disorders–diagnosis. 3. Anxiety Disorders–psychology. 4. Depression, Postpartum–psychology. 5. Evidence-Based Medicine–methods. 6. Internationality. WQ 500] RC537 616.85′27–dc23 2014048416 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Cover image: Cracked White Marble © LordRunar / iStockphoto; Vector silhouette of family © majivecka / iStockphoto Set in 10/12pt MinionPro by SPi Global, Pondicherry, India 1 2015 Contents About the Editors vii About the Contributors viii Foreword xvi Introduction: Current Issues in Identifying Perinatal Depression: An Overview 1 Jeannette Milgrom and Alan W. Gemmill 1 Is Population‐Based Identification of Perinatal Depression and Anxiety Desirable?: A Public Health Perspective on the Perinatal Depression Care Continuum 11 Norma I. Gavin, Samantha Meltzer‐Brody, Vivette Glover, and Bradley N. Gaynes 2 When Screening Is Policy, How Do We Make It Work? 32 Barbara P. Yawn, Elizabeth M. LaRusso, Susan L. Bertram, and William V. Bobo 3 Acceptability, Attitudes, and Overcoming Stigma 51 Anne Buist, Heather O’Mahen, and Rosanna Rooney 4 How to Use the EPDS and Maximize Its Usefulness in the Consultation Process: A Clinician’s Guide 63 Carol Henshaw and Jennifer Ericksen 5 Screening Tools and Methods of Identifying Perinatal Depression 76 Rachel Mann and Jonathan Evans 6 Identifying Perinatal Anxiety 93 Susan Ayers, Rose Coates, and Stephen Matthey 7 Diagnostic Assessment of Depression, Anxiety, and Related Disorders 108 Arianna Di Florio, John Seeley, and Ian Jones 8 Psychosocial Assessment and Integrated Perinatal Care 121 Marie‐Paule Austin, Jane Fisher, and Nicole Reilly vi Contents 9 Postnatal Depression, Mother–Infant Interactions, and Child Development: Prospects for Screening and Treatment 139 Lynne Murray, Pasco Fearon, and Peter Cooper 10 Fathers’ Perinatal Mental Health 165 Richard Fletcher, Craig F. Garfield, and Stephen Matthey 11 Evidence‐Based Treatments and Pathways to Care 177 Michael W. O’Hara, Cindy‐Lee Dennis, Jennifer E. McCabe, and Megan Galbally 12 International Approaches to Perinatal Mental Health Screening as a Public Health Priority 193 Katherine L. Wisner, Marie‐Paule Austin, Angela Bowen, Roch Cantwell, and Nine M.‐C. Glangeaud‐Freudenthal 13 Training Health‐Care Professionals for the Assessment and Management of Perinatal Depression and Anxiety 210 C. Jane Morrell, Jan Cubison, Tom Ricketts, Anne Sved Williams, and Pauline Hall 14 An Overview of Health Economic Aspects of Perinatal Depression 228 Stavros Petrou, C. Jane Morrell, and Martin Knapp 15 The Future of Perinatal Depression Identification: Can Information and Communication Technology Optimize Effectiveness? 240 Tara Donker, Pim Cuijpers, David Stanley, and Brian Danaher 16 Conclusion: Perinatal Depression: Looking Back, Moving Forward 256 Alan W. Gemmill, Jeannette Milgrom, and Nicole Highet Index 266 About the Editors Alan W. Gemmill is Senior Research Fellow at the Parent-Infant Research Institute in Melbourne, Australia. He has worked in perinatal mental health research for 14 years and has a special interest in clinical research studies and preventive intervention programs for maternal mental health difficulties. He has had a lead role in several randomized treatment trials for perinatal depression and has published widely on such topics as the neurodevelop- mental benefits of early stress reduction for premature infants, the prevention of perinatal mood disorders and parenting difficulty, the major risk factors for perinatal depression and anxiety, and the predictive value of screening instruments for perinatal mood disorders. Jeannette Milgrom is Professor of Psychology in the Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences at the University of Melbourne, Director of Clinical and Health Psychology at Austin Health, and Founder and Director of the Parent-Infant Research Institute, Australia. She is internationally recognized for her work with mothers and babies and is currently President of the Marcé Society for Perinatal Mental Health. She is the author of six books, and over 116 scientific articles and chapters. Her research and clinical practice focuses on high-risk infants and early intervention, ante- and postnatal depression, neurodevelopment of premature infants, and screening and developing psychological treatments. Her books on treating and preventing postnatal depression have been translated into Italian and French. She has had a major role with beyondblue and the National Perinatal Depression Initiative since 2001. About the Contributors Marie‐Paule Austin is the chair of Perinatal and Women’s Mental Health at the University of New South Wales; director at St John of God Health Care Mother–Baby Unit; and p sychiatrist at the Royal Hospital for Women, Sydney. Professor Austin has long been at the forefront of research into models of universal psychosocial assessment in the perinatal period, and both her clinical and population‐based researches have been instrumental in shaping the development of policy and practice in perinatal mental health across Australia. Susan Ayers is a professor in the Centre for Maternal and Child Health Research at City University London and visiting professor at the University of Sussex, United Kingdom. Susan’s research focuses on women’s psychological well‐being and mental health during pregnancy and after birth. Susan is an author of Psychology for Medicine (2011) and editor of the Cambridge Handbook of Psychology, Health and Medicine, 2nd Ed. (2007). She was awarded the Annual Lecturer Prize by the Society for Reproductive and Infant Psychology in 2012. Susan L. Bertram, BSN RN MSN, is trained as a psychiatric clinical nurse specialist. She has worked as a lead study coordinator for the past 20 years with Dr. Barbara Yawn in the Olmsted Medical Center, Department of Research. She served as the lead coordinator and project manager for the recently completed TRIPPD 5‐year trial assessing the outcomes of implementing postnatal depression screening, diagnosis, and management in family medi- cine offices. William V. Bobo, MD MPH, is a psychiatrist and researcher, associate professor of psychiatry at the Mayo Medical School, and medical director of the Mayo Clinic Mood Program. His research is focused on the effectiveness, safety, and clinical use of treatments for severe mood disorders. Dr. Bobo has special interest in the perinatal management of these disorders and use of psychotropic medications during pregnancy. Angela Bowen, RN, PhD, is an associate professor in the College of Nursing and the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Saskatchewan. Recent research includes a longitudinal study and epidemiological study of antenatal depression in progress, evalua- tion of maternal mental health programs, and policy development. She is the lead of the
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