Perinatal psychiatric episodes: a population-based study on treatment incidence and prevalence

被引:0
作者
T Munk-Olsen
M L Maegbaek
B M Johannsen
X Liu
L M Howard
A di Florio
V Bergink
S Meltzer-Brody
机构
[1] National Center for Register-based Research,Department of Economics and Business Economics
[2] Aarhus University,Health Service and Population Research Department
[3] CIRRAU-Centre for Integrated Register-based Research,Division of Psychological Medicine and Clinical Neurosciences
[4] Aarhus University,Department of Psychiatry
[5] Institute of Psychiatry,Department of Psychiatry
[6] King’s College London,Department of Psychiatry
[7] Cardiff University,undefined
[8] University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,undefined
[9] Erasmus Medical Centre,undefined
[10] UNC Center for Women’s Mood Disorder,undefined
[11] The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,undefined
来源
Translational Psychiatry | 2016年 / 6卷
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摘要
Perinatal psychiatric episodes comprise various disorders and symptom severity, which are diagnosed and treated in multiple treatment settings. To date, no studies have quantified the incidence and prevalence of perinatal psychiatric episodes treated in primary and secondary care, which we aimed to do in the present study. We designed a descriptive prospective study and included information from Danish population registers to study first-time ever and recurrent psychiatric episodes during the perinatal period, including treatment at psychiatric facilities and general practitioners (GPs). This was done for all women who had records of one or more singleton births from 1998 until 2012. In total, we had information on 822 439 children born to 491 242 unique mothers. Results showed first-time psychiatric episodes treated at inpatient facilities were rare during pregnancy, but increased significantly shortly following childbirth (0.02 vs 0.25 per 1000 births). In comparison, first-time psychiatric episodes treated at outpatient facilities were more common, and showed little variation across pregnancy and postpartum. For every single birth resulting in postpartum episodes treated at inpatient psychiatric facilities, 2.5 births were followed by an episode treated at outpatient psychiatric facility and 12 births by GP-provided pharmacological treatment. We interpret our results the following way: treated severe and moderate psychiatric disorders have different risk patterns in relation to pregnancy and childbirth, which suggests differences in the underlying etiology. We further speculate varying treatment incidence and prevalence in pregnancy vs postpartum may indicate that the current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-5 peripartum specifier not adequately describes at-risk periods across moderate and severe perinatal psychiatric episodes.
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页码:e919 / e919
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