Perinatal Mental Health, feat. Dr. Tiffany Moore-Simas and Dr. Nancy Byatt

Today on the podcast, we’re addressing perinatal mental health. While we’ve talked about depression on the show before, there’s so much more in this sphere as we’ll discuss today.

 

Joining us are two experts in this field who share their passion for this work with us. Dr. Tiffany Moore Simas is Chair and Professor of OB/GYN at UMass Memorial Health and UMass Chan Medical School as well as co-Chair of the ACOG Maternal Mental Health Expert Work Group. And Dr. Nancy Byatt is a tenured Professor of Psychiatry and OB/GYN at UMass Memorial Health and UMass Chan Medical School. Both serve as senior leaders with the Massachusetts Perinatal Psychiatry Access Program, MCPAP for Moms, and Lifeline For Moms.

 

Importance of Perinatal Mental Health

  • Mental health conditions are the most common complications of pregnancy – 1 in 5!

    • More common in adolescents, veterans, marginalized populations (BIPOC, poverty).

  • Untreated mental health conditions carry both short- and long-term consequences that can affect whole family:

    • o   Less engagement in medical care

    • o   Smoking, substance use

    • o   Preterm delivery, low birth weight, NICU admission

    • o   Lactation challenges, bonding issues

      • Parent with untreated mental health disorder is considered an Adverse Childhood Experience (ACE) for the infant.

    • o   Adverse partner relationships

  • Mortality: leading cause of preventable maternal mortality.

    • 100% of maternal deaths due to mental health, including suicide, overdose, are preventable!

  • Underdetected and undertreated

  • OB/GYNs can screen and help manage mental health conditions. The majority (80%) of depression, for example, is managed by primary care providers, not psychiatrists. As obstetric care clinicians, we are the primary care providers to pregnant and postpartum individuals and thus, we should be providing mental health care!

Screening for Perinatal Mood and Anxiety Disorders

  • In this context, perinatal refers to during pregnancy and the first year after pregnancy ends

  • Perinatal Mood and Anxiety Disorders primarily include depression, bipolar disorder, and anxiety or anxiety-related conditions (generalized anxiety disorder, PTSD, OCD).

  • Screens should be performed with validated tools that query the last 7-14 days of symptoms for anxiety and depression.

    • o   Validated tools:

      • PHQ-9, EPDS (depression)

      • GAD-7 (generalized anxiety)

    • o   ACOG recommends screening patients at least once during the perinatal period for depression and anxiety symptoms. If a patient is screened during pregnancy, additional screening should occur during the comprehensive postpartum visit.

      • We recommend screening: new OB visit, later in pregnancy (i.e., 3rd trimester) and postpartum given the almost even distribution of onset predating pregnancy, onset in pregnancy, and onset postpartum.

    • o   Data suggests that early detection and treatment improves outcomes.

  • Bipolar disorder screening:

    • o   In one study, 1 in 5 patients screening positive for postpartum depression actually had bipolar disorder.

      • Recall: bipolar disorder can worsen with antidepressant treatment (unopposed SSRIs) – thus, need to screen for bipolar before initiating pharmacotherapy and ideally universally to prevent harm!

    • o   Patients with bipolar disorder have higher risk of postpartum psychosis

      • Rare: 1-2/1000 perinatal individuals; but 70% have bipolar disorder!

      • 4% risk of infanticide with postpartum psychosis

      • This is a psychiatric emergency.

        • Often occurs within the first days of delivery and most cases occur within the first 3 weeks.

    • o   Screening options:

      • Mood Disorder Question (MDQ) – self administered

      • CIDI – clinician administered with branching logic

    • o   Appropriate to refer to psychiatry if bipolar disorder is suspected – more on resources to help later!

Positive Screening   General Principles of Treatment

  • Just like a glucola, our questionnaires for mental health concerns are screening tests. Subsequent assessment is critical to confirm diagnosis.

    • o   See resources collection at the end of these notes for help!

  • For depression and anxiety, there are three pillars of treatment:

    • o   Psychotherapy

    • o   Pharmacotherapy or medication

      • o   Adjunctive interventions

  • Treat based on level of severity. For information on assessing and treating perinatal mental health conditions, visit the ACOG website.

  • If pharmacotherapy is indicated/started, patients may have some concerns:

    • o   Provide reassurance

    • o   Frame risk/benefit discussion in treated disease vs. untreated disease as not treating is associated with risks - just like any other disease!

    • o   Use lowest effective dose and monotherapy when able

  • Find more information on educating patients about treatment on ACOG’s website.

Concerns for Suicidality or Harm To Baby

  • These can represent urgent clinical scenarios and further assessment and response is critical:

    • o   Thoughts of harming self or baby are common yet not all are necessarily a psychiatric emergency.

    • o   When assessing for risk of harm to self or others it is important to assess:

      • Ideation – Do they have thoughts of harming themselves or someone else?  Are the thoughts fleeting or do they persist?

      • Intent – Are they intending to act on it? Have they thought of how they could do harm themselves or someone else or die by suicide?

      • Plan - Are they planning to act on it?  Have they developed a plan for how to die by suicide or to harm someone else?

    • o   If you are concerned that the patient is at risk of harm to self or others, then it is important to obtain further assessment which includes an evaluation for whether the patient may need psychiatric hospitalization

    • o   Regardless of whether these are a psychiatric emergency, the presence of thoughts of harming self or baby are indicative of higher illness severity.

  • More information on ACOG’s website.

 Resources for Integrating Perinatal Mental Health Care into Your Practice