
Fatigue may be red flag for postpartum
depression
University Park, Pa. – A simple questionnaire on fatigue, administered
two weeks after childbirth, may serve to identify women who at increased risk
of developing moderate to severe postpartum depression according to Penn State
researchers.
“Postpartum depression affects up to 15 to 20 percent of new mothers,”
says Dr. Elizabeth Corwin, assistant professor, School of Nursing. “It comes
on anywhere from two weeks to four months after childbirth and may last from
two weeks to a year.”
The researchers note that 50 to 80 percent of new mothers will have postpartum
blues. However, this very common malady is mild and usually goes away on its
own, although occasionally, postpartum blues can become postpartum depression.
Less than a half percent of new mothers will develop postpartum psychosis, a
very rare and very dangerous mental illness. Corwin and Ingrid Bozoky, a
recent master’s degree recipient, wanted to see if a connection between
postpartum fatigue and postpartum depression exists. The researchers visited
mothers recruited from Centre Community Hospital in State College, Pa., within
24 hours after they gave birth and then at 7, 14 and 28 days after their
babies were born. As part of a larger study on immune system activation, the
researchers collected urine samples, administered a simple, standard
questionnaire about fatigue and on day 28, administered a standard
questionnaire on depression.
“Women with high levels of fatigue on days 7 and 14 were significantly more
likely to report symptoms of depression on day 28, than women with low levels
of fatigue,” Bozoky told attendees at the Scientific Session of the Eastern
Nursing Research Society today (March 23) in University Park, Pa. The simple
20-question questionnaire pinpointed 93 percent of the women who would suffer
moderate to severe depression on day 28 using a cutoff score of 6 on the
fatigue questionnaire.
“A simple questionnaire used on day 14 after birth, which would correspond
with one of the baby’s first visits to the pediatrician or other health care
provider, could serve as a screening tool to identify women likely to develop
postpartum depression,” says Corwin.
The researchers did find five women whose answers to the questionnaire
indicated they were at risk of developing postpartum depression, but these
women did not suffer depression.
“Fatigue after childbirth is normal, and those women who did not report
depression at 28 days showed a steady decline in tiredness during the first
month after delivery,” says Corwin. “The women who did show moderate to
severe postpartum depression did not experience a fall off in fatigue as time
progressed.”
The study found that the choice of breast or bottle-feeding had no effect on
who became depressed. Neither did the presence nor absence of other children
or partners. None of the women had been diagnosed previously as having
suffered postpartum depression, but it was unknown if the women had suffered
previous undiagnosed bouts of generalized depression. There were 38 women in
the study and 14, or 36 percent, showed moderate to severe depression.
Corwin plans to repeat the study with a larger group of women and to include
both rural women and women of color. She will also determine if subjects
suffered any incidents of depression before childbirth or undiagnosed
depression after a previous birth. Other factors to be included are stress
levels and sleep quality.
“In the 1980s people talked about the role of fatigue in depression, but we
do not know if fatigue simply predicts depression or causes depression,”
says Corwin. “There certainly is some connection between fatigue and
postpartum depression.
“Mothers should remember that they need to take care of themselves after
giving birth, fatigue is common and may play a role in postpartum
depression.”
Source: Penn State University
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